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Norm Stamper

Norm Stamper

Posted: January 7, 2010 12:31 PM

The Deadly Ignorance of "Drug Warriors"

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The New York Post last weekend ran an article entitled "Heroin for Dummies." It's a reference to the 16-page pamphlet, "Take Charge Take Care," published (two years ago) by the New York City health department. The pamphlet's purpose in reaching out to heroin addicts is to save lives and prevent disease. But you'd think, judging from the panic-stricken, patently ignorant statements of New York's drug warriors, that the city's real agenda is to put heroin in baby formula.

With it's cutesy subtitle, "City flier 'smacks' of lunacy," and its opening sentence, "Here's the latest smack on taxpayers," the piece could have been written in 1930 by the nation's first Commissioner of the Federal Bureau of Narcotics, Henry "Reefer Madness" Anslinger.

But there's no humor in hysteria and that's precisely what DEA's John Gilbride, the city's own "drug czar," Bridget Brennan and the city council's chair of public safety Peter Vallone (D-Queens) are peddling.

"To suggest there is a method of using [heroin] that alleviates the dangers, that's very disturbing," said Gilbride.

"No matter how many times or how clean the needle is, it's still poison that you're putting in your veins," said Brennan.

"It's sick," said Vallone. He went on to describe the pamphlet as a "tremendous misuse of city funds," and pledged to do what he could to end it. "It sends a message to our youth: give it a try."

Oh, please.

I have no doubt these public officials mean well but they've obviously not done their homework. And their ignorance, should it result in influencing a reversal of this splendid program will cost lives. Guaranteed.

A person addicted to heroin needs the drug as much as a diabetic needs insulin. How he or she gets it is problematic, a function of our spectacularly failed policy of prohibition. But get he or she will get it, and use it. How it's administered means the difference between life and death.

I spent a good deal of time with heroin addicts in six Australian cities on a recent trip there. I visited a supervised injection site in Sydney, clean needle and syringe programs throughout the country, a "one stop" methadone treatment clinic. I listened to testimonials, saw firsthand some of the results of the impressive harm reduction efforts I'd been reading about not just in Australia but in Switzerland, the United Kingdom, Portugal, Vancouver, B.C., the Netherlands. And New York City.

Down Under, I heard from addicts who, because they were taught how to effectively and hygienically administer the drug (in part through pamphlets virtually identical to New York's), are now living safer and healthier lives. Which is to say, they've learned how to reduce the risk of collapsed veins, pus-filled abscesses, and deadly blood-borne pathogens such as HIV and hepatitis.

Those addicted are still at risk, of course. And so is the broader community. Ideally, we would legalize, tax, regulate and control heroin and all other drugs. And use a substantial portion of the substantial revenues generated thereby to fund prevention and treatment.

But until we find the will and the wisdom to do that, outreach programs such as New York's will continue, beyond any doubt, to alleviate suffering. And save lives.

By the way, Mr. Vallone, any kid who picks up one of those bright yellow pamphlets is most unlikely, by reading it, to be drawn to heroin. "Take Charge Take Care" reflects implicitly on the misery and heartache that characterizes the lives of many of the people the Post has chosen to ridicule and dehumanize.

New Yorkers must not let these modern Anslingers rule the day.

 
 
 

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The New York Post last weekend ran an article entitled "Heroin for Dummies." It's a reference to the 16-page pamphlet, "Take Charge Take Care," published (two years ago) by the New York City health d...
The New York Post last weekend ran an article entitled "Heroin for Dummies." It's a reference to the 16-page pamphlet, "Take Charge Take Care," published (two years ago) by the New York City health d...
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Leslie CA
10:30 PM on 01/09/2010
Heroin addicts are NOT like insulin dependent diabetics. Diabetics die without insulin. Heroin addicts don't die without heroin. Yes, withdrawal is unpleasant, but it is not deadly.
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
TRex86
Enjoying life in West Ohio
12:54 PM on 01/08/2010
The War on Drugs: one hundred years of failure and going strong. This idiocy is a reflection of the flaws in the American character, a toxic melange of provincialism, ignorance and arrogance that results in learning nothing from one's mistakes. The criminal justice system cannot treat the disease of substance abuse any more than the Dickensian snakepits treated mental illness. Our Puritanical obstinance will assure another century of expensive failure, filling prisons with non-violent drug offenders at the expense of vital (government funded) social and educational programs.
Take Heed. the Drug War serves powerful interests just as much as our feckless Middle Eastern misadventures serve the military-industrial complex. The Drug Wars will reward the following with unending wealth and job security:
1. Law enforcement/correctional system.
2. Craven politicians who need non-voters to demonize at election time.
3. Third rate scientists whose "research" always supports the status quo and treats the evil drug du jour as having the same sequelae as vampire's blood.
4. The drug cartels whose vast wealth and power is solely a consequence of the extraordinary profits caused by banning drugs.
09:38 AM on 01/08/2010
We can't focus on this problem. We're too busy rejecting the public option and emphasizing wars in the Middle East.
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Kelly L White
Voting Libertarian in 2016, tired of the deception
03:19 AM on 01/08/2010
Thank you Mr. Stamper! You are one of my personal heroes. Anyone supporting the drug war is supporting the abrogation of individual rights and the perpetuation of unnecessary human suffering.

Thank you and all the members of L.E.A.P.- I appreciate you so much.

I remember when the local cop was my friend, when I was little- before I smoked my first joint.

I was nine, pot was thoroughly illegal in nineteen seventies Illinois and ubiquitous. Thereafter, the local cop was my enemy. That's terrible.

I'm a combat vet, I obey all rational laws, I don't even speed, those laws make good sense. I'd have been a police officer were I not a drug user. Well, I don't use alcohol, that stuff messes me up badly so I don't touch it. See, I can't take a job I don't intend to do with the best of my ability and well, I just could not bust people for drugs. sop- you have to be true to your principles, or you are nothing, I feel and the Elders say this is true. I'm very libertarian in this, so I've entered the private security sector and do my best there. The drug war has influenced my life in so many ways- so many.

Thanks for saying what you think is right, I agree with yo and I hope soon, we can all move on to the next crusade.

Kelly
02:33 PM on 01/07/2010
Thanks for continuing to bring reason and rational to the drug reform debate. Keep up the good work.
01:48 PM on 01/07/2010
The puritanical pontificating and ignorant politicians have produced the ridiculous war on drugs which is a complete waste of time and money and which has not and never will work so naturally it will continue well into the future with no prospect of change in sight.