434 lines
25 KiB
Plaintext
434 lines
25 KiB
Plaintext
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Aleister Crowley
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Cocaine
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In its original publication, in The International XI(10) for October 1917 EV,
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this article carried this editorial note: ``We disagree with our gifted con-
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tributing editor on some points, but nevertheless we regard this article as
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one of the most important studies of the deleterious effects of a drug that,
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according to police statistics, is beginning to be a serious menace to our
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youth.'' Now, some sixty years later, it is more relevant than ever, especial-
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ly to Americans, since Crowley was residing in, and largely writing about, the
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United States. It is also interesting to note that the broad outlines of the
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social and -- well, moral -- crises predicted by Crowley are now standard
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Newsweek and Time magazine cover material. While Crowley's prescription for
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ending the drug-abuse crisis may appear harsh to some readers, it had a deeply
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-rooted religious basis for Crowley in The Book of the Law (see his comment-
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aries to AL ??:??.) Readers should however consult Crowley's Synopsis of Six
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Articles on Drugs (Magical Link I(?), new series, Sept.? 1987), his ``stopping
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herion diary'' Liber 28 (Ibid., I(?-?), Aug.-Sept. 1987), and finally his
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novel, Diary of a Drug Fiend (first published 1922 EV) for his later, more
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fully-developed thoughts on the subjects of drug addiction and rehabilitation.
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``There is a happy land, far, far, away.''Hymn
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I.
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NEW YORK CITY
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OF ALL THE GRACES that cluster about the throne of Venus the most timid and
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elusive is that maiden whom mortals call Happiness. None is so eagerly pur-
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sued; none is so hard to win. Indeed, only the saints and martyrs, unknown
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usually to their fellow-men, have made her theirs; and they have attained her
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by burning out the Ego-sense in themselves with the white-hot steel of medita-
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tion, by dissolving themselves in that divine ocean of Consciousness whose
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foam is passionless and perfect bliss.
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To others, Happiness only comes by chance; when least sought, perhaps she is
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there. Seek, and ye shall not find; ask, and ye shall not receive; knock, and
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it shall not be opened unto you. Happiness is always a divine accident. It is
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not a definite quality; it is the bloom of circumstances. It is useless to mix
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its ingredients; the experiments in life which have produced it in the past
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may be repeated endlessly, and with infinite skill and variety -- in vain.
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It seems more than a fairy story that so metaphysical an entity should yet be
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producible in a moment by no means of wisdom, no formula of magic, but by a
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simple herb. The wisest man cannot add happiness to others, though they be
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dowered with youth, beauty, wealth, health, with and love: the lowest black-
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guard shivering in rags, destitute, diseased, old, craven, stupid, a mere
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morass of envy, may have it with one swift-sucked breath. The thing is as
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paradoxical as life, as mystical as death.
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Look at this shining heap of crystals! They are Hydrochloride of Cocaine. The
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geologist will think of mica; to me, the mountaineer, they are like those
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gleaming feathery flakes of snow, flowering mostly where rocks just from the
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ice of crevassed glaciers, that wind and sun have kissed to ghostliness. To
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those who know not the green hills, they may suggest the snow that spangles
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trees with blossoms glittering and lucid. The kingdom of faery has such jewels.
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To him who tastes them in his nostrils -- to their acolyte and slave -- they
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must seem as if the dew of the breath of some great demon of Immensity were
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frozen by the cold of space upon his beard.
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For there was never any elixir so instant magic as cocaine. Give to no matter
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whom. Choose me the last losel on the earth; let him suffer all the tortures
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of disease; take hope, take faith, take love away from him. Then look, see the
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back of that worn hand, its skin discolored and wrinkled, perhaps inflamed
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with agonizing eczema, perhaps putrid with some malignant sore. He places on
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it that shimmering snow, a few grains only, a little pile of starry dust. The
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wasted arm is slowly raised to the head that is little more than a skull; the
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feeble breath draws in that radiant powder. Now we must wait. One minute --
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perhaps five minutes.
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Then happens the miracle of miracles, as sure as death, and yet as masterful
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as life; a thing mroe miraculous, becasuse so sudden, so apart from the usual
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course of evolution. Natura nono facit saltum -- nature never makes a leap.
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True -- therefore this miracle is a thing as it were against nature.
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The melancholy vanishes; the eyes shine; the wan mouth smiles. Amlost manly
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vigor returns, or seems to return. At least faith, hope and love throng very
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eagerly to the dance; all that was lost is found.
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The man is happy.
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To one the drug may bring liveliness, to another languor; to another creative
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force, to another tireless energy, to another glamor, and to yet another lust.
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But each in his way is happy. Think of it! -- so simple and so transcendental!
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The man is happy!
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I have traveled in every quarter of the globe; I have seen such wonders of
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Nature that my pen yet splutters when I try to tell them; I have seen many a
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miracle of the genuis of man; but I have never seen a marvel like to this.
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II.
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IS THERE NOT a school of philosophers, cold and cynical, that accounts God to
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be a mocker? That thinks He takes His pleasure in contempt of the littleness
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of His creatures. They should base their theses on cocaine! For here is
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bitterness, irony, cruelty ineffable. This gift of sudden and sure happiness
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is given but to tantalize. The story of Job holds no such acrid draught. What
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were more icy hate, fiend comedy than this, to offer such a boon, and add
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``This you must not take?'' Could not we be left to brave the miseries of
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life, bad as they are, without this master pang, to know perfection of all joy
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within our reach, and the price of that joy a tenfold quickening of our
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anguish?
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The happiness of cocaine isnot passive or placid as that of beasts; it is self-
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conscious. It tells man what he is, and what he might be; it offers him the
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semblance of divinity, only that he may know himself a worm. It awakes dis-
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content so acutely that never shall it sleep again. It creates hunger. Give
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cocaine to a man already wise, schooled to the world, morally forceful, a man
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of intelligence and self-control. If he be really master of himself, it will
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do him no harm. He will know it for a snare; he will beward of repeating such
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experiments as he may make; and the glimpse of his goal may possibly even spur
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him to its attainment by those means which God hass appointed for His saints.
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But give it to the clod, to the self-indulgent, to the blase;aa; -- to the
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average man, in a word -- and he is lost. He says, and his logic is perfect:
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This is what I want. He knows not, neither can know, the true path; and the
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false path is the only one for him. There is cocaine at his need, and he takes
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it again and again. The contrast between his grub life and his butterfly life
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is too bitter for his unphilosophic soul to bear; he refuses to take the brim-
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stone with the treacle.
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And so he can no longer tolerate the moments of unhappiness; that is, of normal
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life; for he now so names it. The intervals between his indulgences diminish.
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And alas! the power of the drug diminishes with fearful pace. The doses wax;
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the pleasures wane. Side-issues, invisible at first, arise; they are like
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devils with flaming pitchforks in their hands.
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A single trial of the drug brings no noticeable reaction in a healthy man. He
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does to bed in due season, sleeps well, and wakes fresh. South American
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Indians habitually chew this drug in its crude form, when upon the march, and
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accomplish prodigies, defying hunger, thirst, and fatigue. But they only use
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it in extremity; and long rest with ample food enables the body to rebuild its
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capital. Also, savages, unlike most dwellers in cities, have a moral sense and
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force.
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The same is true of the Chinese and Indians in their use of opium. Every one
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uses it, and only in the rarest cases does it become a vice. It is with them
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almost as tobacco is with us.
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But to one who abuses cocainefor his pleasure nature soon speaks; and is not
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heard. The nerves weary of the constant stimulation; they need rest and food.
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There is a point at which the jaded horse no longer answers whip and spur. He
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stumbles, falls a quivering heap, gasps out his life.
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So perishes the slave of cocaine. With every nerve clamoring, all he can do is
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renew the lash of poison. The pharmaceutical effect is over; the toxic effect
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accumulates. The nerves become insane. The victim begins to have hallucina-
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tions. ``See! There is a grey cat in that chair. I said nothing, but it has
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been there all the time.''
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Or, there are rats. ``I love to watch them running up the curtains. Oh yes! I
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know they are not real rats. That's a real rat, though, on the floor. I nearly
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killed it that time. That is the original rat I saw; it's a real rat. I saw it
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first on my window-will one night.''
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Such, quietly enough spoken, is mania. And soon the pleasure passes; is
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followed by its opposite, as Eros by Anteros.
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``Oh no! they never come near me.'' A few days pass, and they are crawling on
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the skin, gnawing interminably and intolerably, loathsome and remorseless.
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It is needless to picture the end, prolonged as this may be, for despite the
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baffling skill developed by the drug-lust, the insane condition hampers the
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patient, and often forced abstinence for a while goes far to appease the
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physical and mental symptoms. Then a new supply is procured, and with tenfold
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zeal the maniac, taking the bit between his teeth, gallops to the black edge
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of death.
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And before that death comes all the torments of damnation. The time-sense is
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destroyed, so that an hour's abstinence may hold more horrors than a century
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of normal time-and-space-bound pain.
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Psychologists little understand how the physiological cycle of life, and the
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normality of the brain, make existence petty both for good and ill. To realize
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it, fast for a day or two; see how life drags with a constant subconscious
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ache. With drug hunger, ths effect is multiplied a thousandfold. Time itself
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is abolished; the real metaphyscial eternal hell is actually present in the
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consciousness which has lost its limits without finding him who is without
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limit.
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III.
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MUCH OF THIS is well known; the dramatic sense has forced me to emphasize what
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is commonly understood, because of the height of the tragedy -- or of the
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comedy, if one have that power of detachment from mankind which we attribute
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only to the greatest of men, to the Aristophanes, the Shakespeares, the
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Balzacs, the Rabelais, the Voltaires, the Byrons, that power which makes poets
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at one time pitiful of the woes of men, at another gleefully contemptuous of
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their discomfiture.
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But I should wiselier have emphasized the fact that the very best men may use
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this drug, and many another, with benefit to themselves and to humanity. Even
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as the Indians of whom I spoke above, they will use it only to accomplish some
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great work which they could not do without it. I instance Herbert Spencer, who
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took morphine daily, never exceeding an appointed dose. Wilkie Collins, too,
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overcame the agony of rheumatic gout with laudanum, and gave us masterpieces
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not surpassed.
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Some went too far. Baudelaire crucified himself, mind and body, in his love
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for humanity; Verlaine became at last the slave where he had been so long the
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master. Francis Thompson killed himself with opium; so did Edgar Allen Poe.
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James Thomson did the same with alcohol. The cases of de Quincey and H.G.
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Ludlow are lesser, but similar, with laudanum and hashish, respectively. The
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great Paracelsus, who discovered hydrogen, zinc and opium, deliberately
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employed the excitement of alcohol, counterbalanced by violent physical
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exercise, to bring out the powers of his mind.
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Coleridge did his best while under opium, and we owe the loss of the end of
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Kubla Khan to the interruption of an importunate ``man from Porlock,'' every
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accursed in the history of the human race!
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IV.
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CONSIDER THE DEBT of mankind to opium. It is acquitted by the deaths of a few
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wastrels from its abuse?
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For the importance of this paper is the discussion of the practical question:
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should drugs be accessible to the public?
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Here I pause in order the beg the indulgence of the American people. I am
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obliged to take a standpoint at once startling and unpopular. I am in the
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unenviable position of one who asks others to shut their eyes to the
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particular that they may thereby visualize the general.
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But I believe that in the matter of legislation America is proceeding in the
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main upon a wholly false theory. I believe that constructive morality is
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better than repression. I believe that democracy, more than any other form of
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government, should trust the people, as it specifically pretends to do.
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Now it seems to me better and bolder tactics to attack the opposite theory at
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its very strongest point.
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It should be shown that not even in the most arguable cse is a government
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justified in restricting use on account of abuse; or allowing justificaiton,
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let us dispute about expediency.
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So, to the bastion -- should ``habit-forming'' drugs be accessible to the
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public?
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The matter is of immediate interest: for the admitted failure of the Harrison
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Law has brought about a new proposal -- one to make bad worse.
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I will not here argue the grand thesis of liberty. Free men have long since
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decided it. Who will maintain that Christ's willing sacrifice of his life was
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immoral, because it robbed the State of a useful taxpayer?
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No; a man's life is his own, and he has the right to destroy it as he will,
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unless he too egregiously intrude on the privileges of his neighbors.
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But this is just the point. In modern times the whole community is one's
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neighbor, and one must not damage that. Very good; then there are pros and
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cons, and a balance to be struck.
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In America the prohibition idea in all things is carried, mostly by
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hysterical newspapers, to a fanatical extreme. ``Senstion at any cost by
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sunday next'' is the equivalent in most editorial rooms of the alleged German
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order to capture Calais. Hence the dangers of anything and everything are
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celebrated dithyrambically by the Corybants of the press, and the only remedy
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is prohibition. In practice, this works well enough; for the law is not
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enforced against the householder who keeps a revolver forhis protection, but
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is a handy weapon against the gangster, and saves the police the trouble of
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proving felonious intent.
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But it is the idea that was wrong. Recently a man shot his family and
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himself with a rifle fitted with a Maxim silencer. Remedy, a bill to prohibit
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Maxim silencers! No perception that, if the man had not had a weapon at all,
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he would have strangled his family with his hands.
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American reformers seem to have no idea, at any time or in any connection,
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that the only remedy for wrong is right; that moral education, self-control,
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good manners, will save the world; and that legislation is not merely a broken
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reed, but a suffocating vapor. Further, an excess of legislation defeats its
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own ends. It makes the whole population criminals, and turns them all into
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police and police spies. The moral health of such a people is ruined for ever;
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only revolution can save it.
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Now in America the Harrison law makes it theoretically impossible for the lay-
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man, difficult even for the physician, to obtain ``narcotic drugs.'' But every
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other Chinese laundry is a distributing centre for cocaine, morphia, and
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heroin. Negroes and street peddlers also do a roaring trade. Some people
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figure that one in every five people in Manhattan is addicted to one or other
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of these drugs. I can hardly believe this estimate, though the craving for
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amusement is maniacal among this people, who have so little care for art,
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literature, or music, who have, in short, none of the resources that the folk
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of other nations, in their own cultivated minds, possess.
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V.
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IT WAS a very weary person, that hot Summer afternoon in 1909, who tramped
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into Logron;ti;o. Even the river seemed too lazy to flow, and stood about in
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pools, with its tongue hanging out, so to speak. The air shimmered softly; in
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the town the terraces fo the cafe;aa;s were thronged with people. They had
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nothing to do, and a grim determination to do it. They were sipping the rough
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wine of the Pyrenees, or the Riojo of the South well watered, or toying with
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bocks of pale beer. If any of them could have read Major-General O'Ryan's
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address to the American soldier, they would have supposed his mind to be
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affected.
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Alcohol, whether you call it beer, wine, whisky, or by any other name, is a
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breeder of inefficiency. While it affects men differently, the results are the
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same, in that all affected by it cease for the time to be normal. Some become
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forgetful, others quarrelsome. Some become noisy, some get sick, some get
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sleepy, others have their passions greatly stimulated.
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As for ourselves, we were on the march to Madrid. We were obliged to hurry. A
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week, or a month, or a year at most, and we must leave Logron;ti;o in
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obedience to the trumpet call of duty.
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However, we determined to forget it, for the time. We sat down, and exchanged
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views and experiences with the natives. From the fact that we were hyrrying,
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they adjudged us to be anarchists, and were rather relieved at our explanation
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that we were ``mad Englishmen.'' And we were all happy togetherl and I am
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still kicking myself for a fool that I ever went on to Madrid.
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If one is at a dinner party in London or New York, one is plunged into an
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abyss of dullness. There is no subject of general interest; there is no wit; it
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is like waiting for a train. In London one overcomes one's environment by
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drinking a bottle of champagne as quickly as possible; in New York one piles
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in cocktails. The light wines and beers of Europe, taken in moderate measure,
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are no good; there is not time to be happy, so one must be excited instead.
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Dining alone, or with friends, as opposed to a party, one can be quite at ease
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with Burgundy or Bordeaux. One has all night to be happy, and one does not
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have to speed. But the regular New Yorker has not time even for a dinner
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party! He almost regrets the hour when his office closes. His brain is still
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busy with his plans. When he wants ``pleasure,'' he calculates that he can
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spare just half an hour for it. He has to pour the strongest liquors down his
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throat at the greatest possible rate.
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Now imagine this man -- or this woman -- slightly hampered; the time available
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e slightly curtailed. He can no longer waste ten minutes in obtaining
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``pleasure''; or he dare not drink openly on account of other people. Well,
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his remedy is simple; he can get immediate action out of cocaine. There is no
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smell; he can be as secret as any elder of the church can wish.
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The mischief of civilizaiton is the intensive life, which demands intensive
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stimulation. Human nature requires pleasure; wholesome plesaures require
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leisure; we must choose between intoxication and the siesta. There are no
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cocaine fiends in Logron;ti;o.
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Moreover, in the absence of a Climate, life demands a Conversation; we must
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choose between intoxication and cultivation of the mind. There are no drug-
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fiends among people who are primarily pre-occupied with science and
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philosophy, art and literature.
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VI.
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HOWEVER, let us concede the prohibitionist claims. Let us admit the police
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contention that cocaine and the rest are used by criminals who would otherwise
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lack the nerve to operate; they also contend that the effects of the drug are
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so deadly that the cleverest thieves quickly become inefficient. Then for
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Heaven's sake establish depots where they can get free cocaine!
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You cannot cure a drug fiend; you cannot make him a useful citizen. He never
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was a good citizen, or he would not have fallen into slavery. If you reform
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him temporarily, at vast expense, risk, and trouble, your whole work vanishes
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like morning mist when he meets his next temptation. The proper remedy is to
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let him gang his ain gait to the de'il. Instead of less drug, give him more
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drug, and be done with him. His fate will be a warning to his neighbors, and
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in a year or two people will have the sense to shun the danger. Those who have
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not, let them die, too, and save the state. Moral weaklings are a danger to
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society, in whatever line their failures lie. If they are so amiable as to
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kill themselves, it is a crime to interfere.
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You will say that while these people are killing themselves they will do mis-
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chief. Maybe; but they are doing it now.
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Prohibition has created an underground traffic, as it always does; and the
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evils of this are immeasurable. Thousands of citizens are in league to defeat
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the law; are actually bribed by the law itself to do so, since theprofits of
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the illicit trade become enormous, and the closer the prohibition, the more
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unreasonably big they are. You can stamp out the use of silk handkerchiefs in
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this way: people say, ``All right: we'll use linen.'' But the ``cocaine
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fiend'' wants cocaine; and you can't put him off with Epsom salts. Moreover,
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his mind has lost all proportion; he will pay anything for his drug; he will
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never say, ``I can't afford it''; andif the price be high, he will steal, rob,
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murder to get it. Again I say: you cannot reform a drug fiend; all you do by
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preventing them from obtaining it is to create a class of subtle and dangerous
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criminals; and even when you have jailed them all, is any one any the better?
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While such large profits (from one thousand to two thousand percent) are to be
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made by secret dealers, it is to the interest of those dealers to make new
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victims. And the profits at present that it would be worth my while to go to
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London and back first class to smuggle no more cocaine than I could hide in
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the lining of my overcoat! All expenses paid, and a handsome sum in the bank
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aat the end of the trip! And for all the law, and the spies, and the rest of
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it, I could sell my stuff with very little risk in a single night in the
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Tenderloin.
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Another point is this. Prohibition cannot be carried to its extreme. It is im-
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possible, ultimately, to withhold drugs from doctors. Now doctors, more than
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any other single class, are drug fiends; and also, there are many who will
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traffic in drugs for the sake of money or power. If you possess a supply of
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the drug, you are the master, body and soul, of any person who needs it.
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People do not understand that a drug, to its slave, is more valuable than gold
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or diamonds; a virtuous woman may be above rubies, but medical experience tells
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us that there is no virtuous woman in need of the drug who would not
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prostitute herself to a rag-picker for a single sniff.
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And if it be really the case that one-fifth of the population takes some drug,
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then this long little, wrong little island is in for some very lively times.
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The absurdity of the prohibitionist contention is shown by the experience of
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London and other European cities. In London any householder or apparently
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responsible person can buy any drug as easily as if it were cheese; and London
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is not full of raving maniacs, snuffing cocaine at every street corner, in the
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intervals of burglary, rape, arson, murder, malfeasance in office, and
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misprison of treason, as we are assured must be the case if a free people are
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kindly allowed to exercise a little freedom.
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Or, if the prohibitionist contention be not absurd, it is a comment upon the
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moral level of the people of the United States which would have been
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righteously resented by the Gadarene swine after the devils had entered into
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them.
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I am not here concerned to protest on their behalf; alloowing the justice of
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the remark, I still say that prohibition is no cure. The cure is to give the
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people something to think about; to develop their minds; to fill them with
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ambitions beyond dollars; to set up a standard of achievement which is to be
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measured in terms of eternal realities; in a word, to educate them.
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If this appear impossible, well and good; it is only another argument for
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encouraging them to take cocaine.
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