Blair's coke crackdown cobblers
at 14:32
So, once again Sir Ian Blair, Metropolitan police commissioner, is targeting the Hampstead dinner party set and its use of cocaine. Apparently he's going to have "smartly dressed" officers posing as dealers in the sort of bars and clubs where posh people get their coke. He wants to stop it replacing wine at smart middle class dinner parties.
Now, fair's fair, his officers have long made life hell for poor users of cocaine and its sister freebase-cocaine, or "crack", so it's probably about time this law officer enforced the law more equally for all. But the lines he's using (sorry! I couldn't resist that) are that middle class coke use is not a victimless crime, that people in north London estates die to perpetuate the supply of coke and that the cocaine plantations of Columbia are now the land mine capital of the world.
So, do we finally have the appalling admission that the law itself, rather than cocaine use, is causing this killing? Why doesn't he do something about that, speak out on that? After all, he has shown himself and his organisation very capable and willing in the past not merely of enforcing existing laws, but in lobbying for changes in the law relating to terrorist activities that threaten all our civil liberties.
Cocaine has been used in a variety of forms, safely for the most part, for thousands of years. The peoples of its native growing area, the Andean mountains of South America, have chewed leaves as a pick me up since they arrived there. It helps them to cope with high altitude living by increasing circulation and therefore take-up of oxygen. It was used in tonic wines, toothpastes and popular drinks were named after it.
It was only scheduled as a proscribed drug a little under a hundred years ago, and the history of that is tainted with the sort of legal institutional racism Blair keeps saying he is against in all its forms - that it made "negroes" frenzied sex fiends.
The history of heavy addiction, and the dangers to health of tainted and constrained supplies all stem from its prohibition as a useful stimulant, not so much from any inherent danger in the drug itself. It is time a liberal world addressed these issues. If we're not going to prohibit absolutely everything that could possibly ever have any kind of effect on peoples' bodies or minds why should we choose these few substances? Cocaine use has been around for far longer than chocolate or coffee.
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It is often said that drugs fuel a third of property crime (addicts thieving to pay for their habit). If this is true, then we have an argument for legalising drugs which no social authoritarian can easily answer.
Yes, legalising drugs would reduce property crime and would put many organised criminals out of business. It would also remove dangerous impurities from the drugs themselves and cean up the blighted politics in countries like Columbia.
Prohibitionists argue that drugs are inherently dangerous. Well, they are, to a greater or lesser degree, but no-one has come close to finding a way of suppressing the supply (let alone the demand).
Some of the more extreme prohibtionists argue that the taking of drugs is morally wicked and should be suppressed for that reason alone, no matter what the consequences.
Well, sorry. I can't find any moral issue here. If someone decides to harm himself, that's his affair and his alone, is it not? Well, for a libertarian, it is. But not for neo-Hegelians who regard any kind of social deviance as a threat to society (like Paul Johnson, Melanie Phillips, Peter Hitchens or Roger Scruton).
What we have in the drugs debate is a bedrock of social authoritarian belief and an overwhelming fear of tabloid wrath.
Any politician who told the truth about drugs would immediately be denounced by Dacre and co as a dangerous public enemy and hounded out of office.
Thanks for that. In Oxford when I was last on the city council we commissioned a report from a criminologist that porported to show that up to 80% of property crime was related to drugs. And that a similar proportion of the prison population locally was inside for crimes that could be related to drugs.
If drugs are inherently dangerous of course then we should say the same thing about caffeine, alcohol and the like. Indeed only the other day I noticed someone jailed for driving under the influence of Red Bull! But for me the decisive factor is that people who are suffering from an illness (addiction) are being killed because the law prevents them getting regular and safe access to a substance whose main danger is often the addiction itself rather than the substance itself.
And Dacre and co should try peddling their bile to the families of those affected by the laws they defend.
I agree it would be a brave politician to put their head over the parapet on this, but perhaps the manner and reason for the recent demise oof our former leader should steel us to that task in the Lib Dems at least!
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An important topic. I have found a book by Griffith Edwards that raises some challenging arguments, not all of them comfortable for the Liberalisation of Drugs position. If we are to debate this, I think we should listen to what Edwards has to say because he makes points that need answering, at the least.
Griffith Edwards: Matters of Substance. Drugs: is legalisation the right answer or the wrong question?" Penguin, 2005.
He has also written a notable book on alcoholism, by the way, if that is not too explosive a topic in this Party……"