Demand Reduction
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Legalization advocates claim that the fight against drugs has not been
won and is, in fact, unconquerable. They frequently state that people still take
drugs, drugs are widely available, and that efforts to change this are futile.
They contend that legalization is the only workable alternative.
·
The facts are to the contrary to such pessimism. On the demand side, the
·
Almost two-thirds of teens say their schools are drug-free, according to
a new survey of teen drug use conducted by The National Center on Addiction and
Substance Abuse (CASA) at
hool
students report drug-free schools.
·
The good news continues. According to the 2001-2002 PRIDE survey, student
drug use has reached the lowest level in nine years. According to the author of
the study, “following 9/11, Americans seemed to refocus on family, community,
spirituality, and nation.” These statistics show that
·
The crack cocaine epidemic of the 1980s and early 1990s has diminished
greatly in scope. And we’ve reduced the number of chronic heroin users
over the last decade. In addition, the number of new marijuana users and cocaine
users continues to steadily decrease.
·
The number of new heroin users dropped from 156,000 in 1976 to 104,000 in
1999, a reduction of 33 percent.
·
Of course, drug policy also has an impact on general crime. In a 2001
study, the British Home Office found violent crime and property crime increased
in the late 1990s in every wealthy country except the
·
There is still much progress to make. There are still far too many people
using cocaine, heroin and other illegal drugs. In addition, there are emerging
drug threats like Ecstasy and methamphetamine. But the fact is
that our current policies balancing prevention, enforcement, and treatment have
kept drug usage outside the scope of acceptable behavior in the
·
To put things in perspective, less than 5 percent of the population uses
illegal drugs of any kind. Think about that: More than 95 percent of Americans
do not use drugs. How could anyone but the most hardened pessimist call this a
losing struggle?
Supply Reduction
·
There have been many successes on the supply side of the drug fight, as
well. For example, Customs officials have made major seizures along the
U.S.-Mexico border during a six-month period after September 11th, seizing
almost twice as much as the same period in 2001. At one port in
·
Purity levels of Colombian cocaine are declining too, according to an
analysis of samples seized from traffickers and bought from street dealers in
the
·
One DEA program, Operation Purple, involves 28 countries and targets the
illegal diversion of chemicals used in processing cocaine and other illicit
drugs. DEA’s labs have discovered that the oxidation levels for cocaine have
been greatly reduced, suggesting that Operation Purple is having a detrimental impact on the production of cocaine.
·
Another likely cause is that traffickers are diluting their cocaine to
offset the higher costs associated with payoffs to insurgent and paramilitary
groups in
·
Whatever the final reasons for the decline in drug purity, it is good
news for the American public. It means less potent and deadly drugs are hitting the streets, and dealers are making less profits
— that is, unless they
raise their ow
n prices, which helps price
·
Purity levels have also been reduced on methamphetamine by controls on
chemicals necessary for its manufacture. The average purity of seized
methamphetamine samples dropped from 72 percent in 1994 to 40 percent in 2001.
·
The trafficking organizations that sell drugs are finding that their
profession has become a lot more costly. In the mid-1990s, the DEA helped
dismantle
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Progress does not come overnight.