The End of Drug Prohibition – Evert Rauwendaal

March 10, 2010

This article was published in PS News.

The End of Drug Prohibition
By Evert Rauwendaal

As the submissions for the National Drug Strategy 2010-2015 come to a close, we are reminded that Australia is wearing a $56.1 billion a year alcohol and tobacco problem.

It is little wonder when you consider that alcohol continues to be sold and advertised at major sporting events as well as fast food type “drive-thru” liquor outlets.

There are no product warnings, no advertising bans.

Exposure to advertising is at saturation point and alcohol has never been easier or more convenient to obtain.

Tourism NSW advertises getaways to Wine Country on billboards and gives tips to ensure visitors are left feeling mesmerised by their cellar door experience.

The Department of State and Regional Development use phrases like ‘world benchmark’ when referring to the three-fold increase in wine production since 1995 (now a $5 billion a year industry).

Market share is won with elegantly landscaped vineyards, high quality product and clever advertising.

Cuddly bears are used to promote rum during cinema previews.

It would seem that increasing the sale and production of alcohol, using more efficient and innovative technology, using advertising with the widest appeal is to be hailed as success.

There are glimmers of hope though.

For while cigarettes can still be sold at corner stores in packets resembling children’s confectionery, consumption continues to fall.

Smokers are confronted with health warnings every time they light-up and the messages seem to be sinking in.

It would be impossible to reach smokers in this way if tobacco were prohibited.

Children are no longer exposed to tobacco products when mum or dad do the grocery shopping thanks to more recent display bans.

The Government should be congratulated for making these decisions.

Illicit drugs, on the other hand, account for $8.2 billion of Australia’s drug problem.

Unlike alcohol, the goal is to suppress, not increase the supply.

Prohibition is enforced by the criminal justice system despite having more than 30 years of evidence that drugs cannot be policed away.

Law enforcement Agencies are no closer to eliminating drugs.

Busts are pointless and futile for this very reason.

Drugs continue to be distributed by people without qualifications, without quality controls and usually become “cut” (adulterated) at points along the supply chain to maximise profit; which, because of prohibition, is tax-free.

Rivals in this industry settle disputes with guns and violence.

Victims see little to no recompense when harm befalls them.

Retribution awaits those who welsh on debts or involve the Police.

Market share in this industry isn’t won with glitzy ads, but seized at gunpoint.

The Federal Government has recently taken to reinvesting confiscated drug money in fighting the drug trade.

This policy actually ensures drugs remain a valuable commodity and even the smallest of drug transactions remains highly profitable.

The financial incentive to sell drugs has become so great that job vacancies (created by Police arrests) are instantly filled without the need to even advertise.

The grouping of recreational drugs as ‘licit’ or ‘illicit’ has done nothing to reduce the harms associated with the consumption of drugs in either category and should be considered a failed policy.

Licit drugs remain poorly controlled and socially destructive; the illicit drug market is not controlled at all.
The solution is to abandon the licit/illicit binary by ranking all recreational drugs according to their physical harms, imposing blanket advertising bans, prescription access to drugs designed to be injected and introducing a licensing scheme for the more addictive ones.

Drugs without habit forming qualities, such as MDMA and LSD, could be dispensed to adults by qualified pharmacists who have more to lose if they sell to someone they shouldn’t (unlike a desperate heroin addict).

All will be heavily taxed and boxed in generic packaging with graphic pack warnings.

The introduction of these measures will undoubtedly hurt sales and reduce consumption, but also deprive miscreants and thugs of tax free income.

If the Government is serious about crime and substance overuse, the solution is blindingly obvious – it must abandon the policy of arbitrary drug prohibition and address the conflict between business interests and public health.

It must create sensible and consistent evidence based policy to regulate drugs that are not always used for therapeutic purposes.

With countries like Denmark and others slowly coming to this realisation, Australia risks being left behind.

Evert Rauwendaal is a Bachelor of social work graduate.  This article first appeared at www.onlineopinion.com.au

Filed under: Uncategorized

3 Comments Leave a Comment

  • 1. David Raynes  |  March 20, 2010 at 12:51 am

    The sheer naivety of this article beggars belief.

    If more of the illegal substances were legalised & normailsed for huiman consumption that would most certainly NOT take criminal elements out of supply. (Legal) tobacco & alcohol are two of the most traficked commodities in the criminal world.

    Legalised use-reinforcing drugs, are a PERFECT vehicle for crime, even better if there is heavy retail control and tax on them. Over 20% of the UK tobacco market is muggled, counterfeit or both. In other countries it can be much worse.

    The writer needs to get back to college-perhaps study for a Masters?

    If any illegal drugs are to be legalised, it needs to be for legitimate rational reasons, that stand up to intellectual scrutiny. For reasons that demonstrate a reduction in personal and social harm. and where the unforseen consequeneces of the change are thought through.

    Alcohol & tobacco cause more social and personal harm precisely BECAUSE they are mostly legal everywhere.

    In those countries with social or legal taboos on use (eg on alcohol) total harm is much reduced.

    Deal with that argument if you can.

  • 2. Evert Rauwendaal  |  April 18, 2010 at 2:41 pm

    Alcohol and tobacco cause harm because they are largely unregulated drugs which have been aggresively marketed for the better part of last century. No one is advocating that heroin be marketed like alcohol or without products standards like tobacco. I would happily support a ban on alcohol advertising, an increase in alcohol excise and stringent product standards for cigarettes.

    As a far as the link to ‘criminal elements’ involved in supply, I have just returned from a holiday in wine country and can report back that dozens of competing wineries can coexist without resorting to violent turf wars and assassination attempts. The same can’t be said about market for prohibited drugs.

  • 3. Khalid  |  June 11, 2010 at 7:44 am

    I fully agree, The Government should be congratulated for making these decisions. Alcohol and drug abuse cost governments lots of money and its about time we all have a stand on this issue

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In addition to criminalizing HIV transmission, many countries impose criminal sanctions for same-sex sex, commercial sex and drug injection. Such laws constitute major barriers to reaching key populations with HIV services. Those behaviours should be decriminalized, and people addicted to drugs should receive health services for the treatment of their addiction’.

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