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Here’s Kevin Drum:

And on another related note, the damage from the Oxy epidemic is worst among the poor and working class. It’s easy to favor drug legalization when you’re middle-class and well educated. Your social group probably doesn’t include many people who abuse drugs much in the first place. Moderate users can afford their habit. And when their use turns into addiction, they usually have a strong support network to help out. It’s a problem, but not a huge one. In poor communities, none of this is true.

Let’s try to look at this from a different perspective:

It’s easy to favor drug prohibition when you’re middle-class and well educated. Your social group probably doesn’t include many of the 450,000 people currently imprisoned for violating drug laws. Nor does it include the thousands who die every year in developing countries, as a result of the US-led war on drugs. Moderate users can afford their habit, without having to sell drugs. And when their use turns into addiction, they usually have a strong support network to help out. It’s a problem, but not a huge one. In poor communities, none of this is true.

Sorry, but I’m not willing to imprison 450,000 people, let thousands die, and let millions suffer with untreated pain, just because some people abuse Oxycontin. And isn’t this horrible outbreak happening despite our draconian drug laws? If we legalize pot or cocaine, does the Oxy epidemic get even worse?

I hope this is not the beginning of a shift of opinion of progressive pundits in favor of the war of drugs. (“Liberal” politicians already favor the war on drugs.) I grew up middle class, and have known lots of people who used drugs. I don’t recall a single one of my acquaintances ever serving a minute in prison. Nor did our last three presidents.

The 450,000 figure is misleading, as many serve only short sentences (this includes those in jail awaiting trial.) Millions of people go through our prison system for drug law violations. Why don’t I know any of them? Is it perhaps because the system mostly punishes poor and minority drug users and sellers? Isn’t this the sort of “disparate impact” that liberals (rightly) complain about?

Some commenters were skeptical about my previous post, which claimed class bias in anti-rape policies. But we see the same class bias in drug laws. How many examples do we need to see?

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This entry was posted on January 16th, 2016 and is filed under Libertarianism, Social trends. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response or Trackback from your own site.



