211 lines
9.5 KiB
Plaintext
211 lines
9.5 KiB
Plaintext
Several people have requested that I post a translation of the Spiegel
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interview in full:
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"The drug war is lost"
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Interview with the American Nobel Prize winner Milton Friedman on
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the legalization of the illicit drug market
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Der Spiegel, 14/1992
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Spiegel: The United States puts out 12 billion dollars a year on its
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all-out war on drugs, but victory seems farther away than ever. Why is
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that?
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Friedman: Why is it that the socialist government of the Soviet Union
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was a disaster, and the GDR just as unsuccessful?
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S: We actually wanted to talk about the American drug-politik...
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F: ...that carries all signs of a socialist program. If a private
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program falls apart, brings losses, then there's lots of people losing
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lots of money. Therefore they have a great interest in ending such a
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program before it leads to ruin. However a government, whose program
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fails, must neither admit failure nor pay out of its own pocket.
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S: Is the anti-drug program, therefore, always going to escalate?
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F: The reaction to failed government programs is always the same:
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People say it must be made only a little bit different, a little bit
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bigger, a little bit more expensive.
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S: Since when have we seen this tendency?
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F: The War on Drugs was began with Richard Nixon in 1969. That project
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failed, but was put on the back burner for the next 17 years. The War
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on Drugs was started up again by Ronald Reagan. He expanded it, especially
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in Florida, but he couldn't win, either. Then came Mr. Bush, who declared
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total war and appointed with much fanfare a drug czar named William Bennet.
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S: Who was in office for only 20 months.
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F: He stepped down after he told the whole world that the measures he
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initiated had been a total success. But that wasn't the case. Back in
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1972 I predicted the failure of the Nixon Administration's anti-drug
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programs and recommended the legalization of all drugs. I've not had
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any indications that I should revise the judgements I've made at that
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time.
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S: You share these opinions with former Secretary of State George Schultz
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and columnist William F. Buckley. They belong to a small group of
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conservatives...
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F: ...that group isn't so small anymore; I'm not a conservative anyway,
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never was one. A conservative is someone who wants to leave things as
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they are. That's not what I want. I am a liberal, in the classic
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European meaning of the word.
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S: Very well. As a liberal, you recommend the legalization of drugs.
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F: I am against the prohibition as we have it and plead therefore, that
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drugs be dealt with in just the same way alcohol and tobacco are.
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S: Which are legally for sale.
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F: With certain restrictions. Alcohol can only be bought by persons of
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a certain age, not during worship times and some places only from particular
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government-run stores.
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S: Are these restrictions too broad for a free-market economist?
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F: It would be better to have the free market do the regulating. It can,
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but it should not, be the role of the government to sell hard drugs, any
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more than it should be to run a lottery or to promote gambling.
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S: Many states see a good source of income in that.
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F: That's true unfortunately, but the state shouldn't have any function
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in a free market. It should stick to a democratic and political direction.
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S: Implicit in the legalization of the drug market would be a change
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in the corresponding laws. Which of them do you expect to change first?
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F: The main problem is to clean out Congress, and then the leave the finer
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regulations up to the states themselves.
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S: Who should produce the drugs?
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F: Those who can do it best -- the pharmaceuticals industry.
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S: But they would only reluctantly produce products which cause addiction.
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F: What kind of nonsense are you telling me? A big portion of the
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pharmaceuticals on the market are addictive. There are people who are
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addicted to Aspirin, dependent on sleeping pills or won't get by without
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pain relievers.
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S: Where, in a legalized drug market, would the pharmaceuticals industry
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obtain the necessary raw materials?
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F: That would be regulated by the free market.
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S: Can you imagine poppy fields in Kansas and Marijuana farms in
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California?
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F: Why not? Marijuana cultivation still goes on despite massive
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eradication programs of the Marijuana Cops. Marijuana plays a key roll in
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the U.S. drug politik. Although not a single case is known of a Marijauan
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overdose leading to death, and dozens of scientific studies support
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Marijuana as harmless, the War on Grass has been declared.
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S: Has the price of Marijuana gone up according to the laws of the
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freemarket?
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F: Yes. Compared with other drugs, Marijuana got to be considerably
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more expensive, and cocaine and and then crack got to be cheaper.
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The drug prohibition pushed the consumers from one harmless drug to
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a very, very dangerous one.
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S: Would you make a legal distinction between, for example, cocaine
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and marijuana in a free-market drug economy?
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F: I would treat they just the same as alcohol and cigareettes. It's
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no crime to buy Schnaps, but it is to drive drunk. It would be the same
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with drugs.
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S: To use the alcohol market as an example: Do you see "Light Heroin"
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or a "Cocaine for Beginners" in special displays in your drugstores?
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F: Why not, we also have Light Beer and low-alcohol Wine. For both of
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those there's a public market. In this discussion, though, there's one
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thing you shouldn't forget: the real winner in a legalized drug market
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is the consumer. The legal drugs would be much cleaner, their active
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ingredients indicated on the side of the package, the dangers of overdose
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given also...
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S: ...and the number of addicts will rise steeply, my friend.
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F: There's not one single empirical study to support that argument.
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The opposite is the case. The cessation of alcohol prohibition led
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to no increase of alcohol consumption in the long run. Actually the
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number of alcohol-related deaths fell, because the products were cleaner.
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And since Marijuana was legalized in Holland, Marijuana abuse has gone
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down, and similar data comes out of Alaska, where for one year now the
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possession of Marijuana for personal use hasn't been punished.
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S: Such arguments seem not to impress the drug warriors.
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F: Admittedly, other arguments are much stronger. It's safe to say
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that the American inner cities are going down the drain as a result
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of the current drug politik: 10,000 surplus deaths in the drug world
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every year, the prisons are overflowing, and there's little time left
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for the sentencing of other crimes. That's happening apart from the
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fact that the number of non-drug related crimes is rising. Or it's
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It's almost impossible to name a single positive result of the war
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on drugs, and I haven't even touched on the affects on Peru, Columbia,
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and Panama...
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S: ...where the Bush Administration has expanded its anti-drug war to.
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F: A completely unjustifiable undertaking. We've destroyed these lands
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with our own own soldiers, helicopters, and SWAT teams just because we
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couldn't enforce our own laws at home.
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S: The legalization of the American drug market would have considerable
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economic consequences for countries like Columbia and Peru.
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F: Assuredly. With our politik we've left these states to the production
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of agricultural products like marijuana and coca, which go against their
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long-term interests. If we were to legalize the consumption of drugs
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tomorrow, by tomorrow afternoon the price of Cocaine would drop like a
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rock.
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S: And 10,000 people would lose their jobs.
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F: Be careful when you talk about unemployment. What the farmers in Peru
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get for their coca leaves they can't distinguish from what they'd get under
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a legalization. I would rather have the farmers stay in business so they
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can put the raw ingredients up for sale at some reasonable price like our
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farmers. The ones who will lose their jobs will be those who earn massive
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profits from the drug trade -- the members of the cartels, the smugglers
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and the pushers.
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S: Also standing to earn is the state, which would tax legal drugslike it
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does alcohol and cigarettes.
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F: Sure. Though giving the state a new income source is not my intention
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when I advocate legalization.
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S: Since the decade-long War on Drugs has brought no visible success, does
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it follow that powerful people in and behind the political scene are gaining
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money and influence by preventing its success?
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F: There exists every conceivable reason to believe that people who earn
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money from the drug market will do everything they can to ensure their
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source of income. This is no example of a conspiracy theory, but the
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forseeable relationships of members of a certain branch of industry. That
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pertains to the drug baron no differently than automobile tycoon.
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S: Wouldn't legalization also bring dismay to the professional prosecutors?
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F: The prosecutor and the prosecuted have a common interest in the
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drug war. Prohibition assures a good livelihood to those who prohibit
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the drugs and to those who deliver the drugs. That also goes for the
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prosecutors. Their estates are being well-furnished, their incomesraised.
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Fame and good careers are assured for them.
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S: Now that is starting to sound like a conspiracy theory.
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F: Not necessarily. The ["pits"] of corruption are documentable and
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growing. You can be sure that when there's a big pot of gold out there,
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that there will be people who want to have it and who will put all other
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interests aside to get it.
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