
CONTENTS
A
Message from the Drug Enforcement Administration
Summary
of the Top Ten Facts on Legalization
Fact
1: We have made significant progress in fighting drug use and drug trafficking
in America. Now is not the time to abandon our efforts.
The Legalization Lobby claims that the fight against
drugs cannot be won. However, overall drug use is
down by more than a third in the last twenty years, while
cocaine use has dropped by an astounding 70 percent.
Ninety-five percent of Americans do not use drugs. This
is success by any standards.
Fact
2: A balanced approach of prevention, enforcement, and treatment is the
key in the fight against drugs.
A successful drug policy must apply a balanced
approach of prevention, enforcement and treatment. All
three aspects are crucial. For those who end up hooked
on drugs, there are innovative programs, like Drug
Treatment Courts, that offer non-violent users the option
of seeking treatment. Drug Treatment Courts provide
court supervision, unlike voluntary treatment centers.
Fact
3: Illegal drugs are illegal because they are harmful.
There is a growing misconception that some illegal
drugs can be taken safely. For example, savvy drug
dealers have learned how to market drugs like Ecstasy
to youth. Some in the Legalization Lobby even claim
such drugs have medical value, despite the lack of
conclusive scientific evidence.
Fact
4: Smoked marijuana is not scientifically approved medicine. Marinol,
the legal version of medical marijuana, is approved by science.
According to the Institute
of Medicine, there is no future in smoked marijuana as medicine. However,
the
prescription drug Marinol—a legal and safe version of
medical marijuana which isolates the active ingredient
of THC—has been studied and approved by the Food
&
Drug Administration as safe medicine. The difference
is that you have to get a prescription for Marinol from a
licensed physician. You can’t buy it on a street corner,
and you don’t smoke it.
Fact
5: Drug control spending is a minor portion of the U.S. budget. Compared
to the social costs of drug abuse and addiction, government spending on
drug control is minimal.
The Legalization Lobby claims
that the United States has wasted billions of dollars in its anti-drug
efforts.
But for those kids saved from drug addiction, this is
hardly wasted dollars. Moreover, our fight against drug
abuse and addiction is an ongoing struggle that should
be treated like any other social problem. Would we give
up on education or poverty simply because we haven’t
eliminated all problems? Compared to the social costs
of drug abuse and addiction—whether in taxpayer
dollars or in pain and suffering—government spending
on drug control is minimal.
Fact
6: Legalization of drugs will lead to increased use and increased levels
of addiction. Legalization has been tried before, and failed miserably.
Legalization has
been tried before—and failed
miserably. Alaska’s experiment with Legalization in the
1970s led to the state’s teens using marijuana at more
than twice the rate of other youths nationally. This led
Alaska’s residents to vote to re-criminalize marijuana
in 1990.
Fact
7: Crime, violence, and drug use go hand-in-hand.
Crime, violence and drug use
go hand in hand. Six times as many homicides are committed by people
under the
influence of drugs, as by those who are looking for
money to buy drugs. Most drug crimes aren’t committed
by people trying to pay for drugs; they’re committed
by people on drugs.
Fact
8: Alcohol has caused significant health, social, and crime problems in
this country, and legalized drugs would only make the situation worse.
The Legalization Lobby claims
drugs are no more dangerous than alcohol. But drunk driving is one
of the
primary killers of Americans. Do we want our bus
drivers, nurses, and airline pilots to be able to take drugs
one evening, and operate freely at work the next day?
Do we want to add to the destruction by making drugged
driving another primary killer?
Fact
9: Europes more liberal drug policies are not the right model for
America.
The Legalization Lobby claims
that the “European
Model” of the drug problem is successful. However,
since legalization of marijuana in Holland, heroin
addiction levels have tripled. And Needle Park seems
like a poor model for America.
Fact
10: Most non-violent drug users get treatment, not jail time.
The Legalization Lobby claims
that America’s prisons
are filling up with users. Truth is, only about 5 percent
of inmates in federal prison are there because of simple
possession. Most drug criminals are in jail—even on
possession charges—because they have plea-bargained
down from major trafficking offences or more violent
drug crimes.

Crime, violence, and drug use go hand-in-hand.
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