December 20th, 2010

Gwen Ifill of the Lehrer News Hour recently commented, almost blandly, that she hardly heard anyone talking about a “War on Drugs” any more. This is true in many policy circles, but this label and its associated linguistic terms still survive in the media and in the culture. Sending this language to the dustbin of history would be a worthy goal for policy reformers.

Some people would respond “I will not stop calling it a war on drugs until war-like policy X is stopped!” (Where X is overcrowded prisons, no knock raids by police in riot gear etc.).

This may be a logical fallacy however, in that it assumes that the language itself doesn’t justify the objected-to policy. As any careful student of politics knows — and as cognitive psychology research teaches — words can cue us consciously and unconsciously to think that certain actions are more or less justifiable. We feel differently about a “death tax” versus an “estate tax”, a “homeless person” versus a “vagrant”. Sometimes it’s not even the literal content of the words that affect us but the images and emotions they evoke: Clinicians have more punitive reactions to “alcohol abuse patients” than “problem drinking patients” simply because the word “abuse” invokes violent images, fear and anger in the listener.

War on Drugs language has similar effects, both in ways that are obvious and in ways that operate below the level of consciousness. If everyone simply stopped using “drug war” language, doors that are closed to us might swing open, including in places we that were literally unthinkable “in a time of war”.

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7 Responses to “Ending “War on Drugs” Language to Promote Policy Reform”

  1. Brett Bellmore says:

    Or the war like behavior, being admitted to be legitimate in a non-war stance, might just spread to the rest of nominally peaceful law enforcement.

    No, I think I’ll keep calling it a “War” until they put the police back in a peacetime stance.

  2. Pete Guither says:

    Vietnam was a police action.

  3. Aardvark Cheeselog says:

    > Clinicians have more punitive reactions to “alcohol abuse patients” than “problem drinking patients” simply because the word “abuse” invokes violent images, fear and anger in the listener.

    Which is doubtless the reason why, even today, our political elites and their appointees absolutely refuse to ever, under any circumstances, admit that there is any kind of nonmedical use of any psychoactive substance (other than a few arbitrary exceptions) which is not also “abuse.” I submit that there will be no real progress toward rational policy while this remains true… as long as nonmedical drug use (other than the few arbitrary exceptions) is viewed as fundamentally illegitimate, an idiotic preoccupation with coercion will continue to drive policy.

    On a related note, it recently occurred to me that the last time we seemed so close to repealing cannabis prohibition, back in the late ’70s, there was a lot of “marijuana’s not a drug, it’s an herb” going around. People have been trying for a long time to create a distinction between “soft” and “hard” drugs, with cannabis being the prototype of the former. As a way of moving policy, that apparently hasn’t worked, and the solution will probably amount to siding with the “not a drug, an herb” group (as much as I despise that kind of thinking).

  4. Steve Clay says:

    Although Kerlikowske was mocked for it, publicly calling an “end to the war” I think may have positive effects within federal agencies, however, I think the term holds a lot of power in moving public opinion and I don’t blame reform groups for using it.

    Then there’s the reality: Besides a few liberal havens, American police departments absolutely use war-like tactics and continually get new toys, new police powers, and yearly federal grants incentivizing these actions.

  5. strayan says:

    If it isn’t a war, why is land being bombed with pesticide? Why are people fighting each other with machine guns and using armoured tanks to fight plants?

    http://inapcache.boston.com/universal/site_graphics/blogs/bigpicture/riodrugwar_11_29/r19_26128855.jpg

    http://inapcache.boston.com/universal/site_graphics/blogs/bigpicture/riodrugwar_11_29/r11_26129367.jpg

    Looks like war to me: http://www.boston.com/bigpicture/2010/11/rios_drug_war.html

  6. Richard W. Crews says:

    use is not abuse

  7. Steve Rolles says:

    I think you could potentially make the case for a change in rhetoric for domestic approaches to users, and even possibly localised supply enforcent - but move to the international arena and supply-side drug enforcement is becoming increasingly war-like in many key repects; the conflation with the ‘war on terror’ in Afghanistan, the miltarisation of crop eradication and anti-drug efforts, the military targetted killings of key traffickers, and the level of armed violence associated with police and military drug enforcement in Mexico for example.

    In this context the phrase war on drugs is more apporpriate now than ever, and whilst it may sit uncomfortably with some user based public health initiatives (harm redcution, treatment diversion and so on) the fact is that even these operate within the same punitive legal framework. the difference is a matter of degree and context - but qualitatively different to the way we deal with alcohol or tobacco users for example.

    That drugs have long been presented as a ‘threat’ (be it to health, ‘our borders’ or our children) - indeed often, and still described as ‘evil’ (for example in the preamble of the 1961 Un single convention) has been a key part of the crusading narrative that has perpetuated the policy. The implicitly righteous fight against evil sits well with the war rhetoric - one of the reasons that the policy has been so effectively immunised against meaningful scrutiny for so long. I dont think this can be blamed on those critics who still call it a war by those who now choose not to - even thoough they are still fighting it.