Online NewsHour Extra NEWSHOUR EXTRA A NewsHour with Jim Lehrer special for students Search For Teachers Daily Buzz Top Story

Top Story

 

Marijuana and cocaine's affect on the body

Extra Buzz Beat:
Party Drugs:
A student explains the dangers

Extra
Feature:
Party Drugs:
News about popular yet fatal drugs near you.

Get the NewsHour History:

California residents try to legalize possession and use of illicit drugs.
Oct. 31, 2000

NewsHour discussion on President Clinton's policy toward Colombia.
Aug. 30, 2000

The government decides to prosecute doctors who prescribe medical marijuana.
Dec. 30, 1996

Streaming Video:

Click here to Play

The reach of Mexican drug networks
(8/28/00)

Click here to Play

Congress considers more aid to Colombia
(2/15/00)

NewsHour coverage of: Health and Law

Outside Links:
Extra is not responsible for the content of external Internet sites.

Drug Enforcement Administration

White House Office of Drug Policy

NORML (National Org. for the Reform of Marijuana Laws)

State Dept. Bureau of International Narcotics

National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse

Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration

The Lindesmith Center- Drug Policy Foundation

Classroom activities:

Close-up Foundation

PBS Teacher
Source

The War on Drugs
May 22, 2002

Drug PacksYou've probably heard about a war the United States has been fighting for decades -- and it has nothing to do with September 11.

The United States has been fighting a "war on drugs" for decades to slow the supply of drugs flowing into the U.S. and to reduce the demand for drugs.

In 2002, around 14 million Americans were using illegal drugs on a regular basis, a number that has not risen since 1999. DEA Drug SeizureAmericans spent roughly $64 billion on illegal drugs in 2000. That's over three times as much as the government spends fighting drugs.

The National Office of Drug Control Policy spends around $19 billion a year trying to stop the drug trade. Drug use in the U.S. costs billions more indirectly, through crime, hospital stays, and lost work days.

But what exactly is the war on drugs and how do we fight it?

History of the War

The fight against drug use in the U.S. dates back to the late 1800s. Before then, the dangers of some drugs were not fully known and the government did little to regulate them.

The original Coca-Cola beverage, first createdCoke Bottle in 1886, got its name from one of its main ingredients: cocaine. It was marketed as "a nerve and brain tonic" and a cure for headaches. But it wasn't long before people realized that cocaine was dangerously addictive, and the creators of what would one day become the world's most popular soft drink eliminated the drug from the recipe around 1900.

Since then a lot has changed. By 1971, President Richard Nixon was calling drug use "public enemy number one," and enacted laws to fight the importation of narcotics.

Ten years later, President Ronald Reagan President Reagandeclared a more militant "war on drugs." But it was his wife, First Lady Nancy Reagan, who coined: "Just Say No."

Drugs have also become a problem in the work world. Addicted employees don't tend to be the most productive on the job. So many private businesses have adopted mandatory employee drug testing.

Some people say the practice is an unfair invasion of privacy, and that whatever workers do in their spare time is none of their bosses' business. But still, many national companies like Home Depot test all job applicants and current employees.

Legalizing drugs

Small groups of people advocate a more radical solution to the drug problem: legalize it. They point to Prohibition -- the 1930's-era law that outlawed alcohol. The law was implemented to try to curb the widespread problem of alcoholism, but it turned out to be a dismal failure.

There are efforts in several states to legalize marijuana but so far no other specific drugs are targeted for legalization. California passed a Marijuanaproposition in 1996 making it legal for people to sell and purchase marijuana for medical use. (Some doctors believe that marijuana can help relieve pain for people with serious incurable diseases). Five other states have also made marijuana legal. But, in May, 2001, the Supreme Court struck down California's "medical marijuana" law.

In some countries, like the Netherlands, drugs like marijuana and its more potent cousin, hashish, are legal in small amounts. However, research suggests that this policy has not brought down drug use. The Amsterdam Municipal Health Service showed a rise in hard-core addicts in 1992, related to a significant rise in the local heroin supply which led to a price drop of almost 75 percent.

The American public has not bought into the idea of legalization on a large scale. Most people still think that the government has an obligation to try to keep drugs off the street and to punish people who manufacture, sell and use them.

Drug Production

Illegal drugs are produced on farms, in laboratories, and in backyards all across the world. Although millions of dollars worth of drugs are produced within our borders, millions more also come from other countries on boats, planes and in drug smugglers' suitcases.

Colombia is the source of most of the cocaine and heroin used in the U.S. Drugs like marijuana, South America Mapesctasy, and methamphetamine come from many sources, including Mexico, the Netherlands, Asia and Europe. According to the United Nations, cannabis (marijuana), opiates (opium), and cocaine are the most widely trafficked drugs worldwide.

Before Colombia became our leading supplier, farms in other South American countries grew acres and acres of coca plants, the raw material from which cocaine is made.

The U.S. worked with the governments of Peru and Bolivia to reduce the drug supply, spraying plant-killing chemicals on acres of drug plantations and paying farmers to grow other crops instead. Coca production was cut in half.

However, much of the drug production simply moved from those countries into neighboring Colombia. The U.S. government is spending $1.3 billion on "Plan Columbia," a detailed long-term anti-drug plan that helps the Colombian government get rid of its coca farms. Drug War
Colombian farmers -- most of whom are very poor and have few other opportunities for employment -- say coca brings in the most money and they are unsure the Colombian government will keep its promises to help make other crops just as profitable.

Drug Usage

Drug use in the U.S. peaked in the late 1970's. Since then, drug use has declined or leveled-off among most age groups. But many anti-drug experts are worried the trend could start to rise again unless young people are taught how dangerous drugs can be.

Overall, drug use has stayed about the same since 1988. According to a 2000 government survey, 27 percent of teens (12 to 17-year-olds) have experimented with drugs at least once in their lifetime.

But while drug use appears to be declining slightly among 12 to 17-year-olds (it's now down to about 10 percent), more older teens and young adults (about 16 percent) appear to be using drugs regularly.

At least 26 percent of high school seniors reported having used an illicit drug in the past month, according to a 2002 government study. Teen marijuana-use is up almost 300 percent since 1992. The use of ecstasy continues to rise among middle and high school students, while use of a 1970's "party drug," LSD, has declined.

Cocaine remains less common among high school students, but the government estimates almost 9 percent of seniors have tried cocaine at least once in their lives.

Researchers are not completely sure why some drugs gain or lose popularity among different age groups. But more disturbing to many is that today's teenagers seem less concerned about the health risks of drug use and the social and psychological damage addiction usually causes.

According to a Partnership for a Drug-Free America survey, the number of teenagers who think marijuana and cocaine are harmful has gone down dramatically. In fact, teenagers overwhelmingly think marijuana is less harmful than any other drug. The fact that marijuana use is going up shows current anti-drug messages are not getting through to all teenagers.

Are we winning the war?

According to the White House's National Drug Control Strategy, there are around five million Drug Strategydrug abusers (about 6.7 percent of the population) who need immediate treatment and who are responsible for the majority of drug demand. Over 5,000 anti-drug programs and organizations in the U.S. are trying to help them overcome their addiction and prevent the everyone else from starting.

Drug use affects more people than those who use it. Many consider drugs as one of the top threats facing our nation. Drug use makes health care more expensive, neighborhoods more dangerous and jails more crowded. Addiction contributes to child abuse, poverty and unemployment.

Many believe the only way to win the war against drugs is to go beyond teaching that drug use is wrong, and make drugs more difficult to get and more expensive to buy. Many people are trapped in urban environments where selling drugs is the best or sometimes the only way to make money. Others turn to drugs as an easy way to "feel good" fast and escape from worries or problems that they don't know how to handle.

It is a growing belief that the booming drug trade and high addiction rates are rooted in these deeper social problems and it is going to take a lot more than police crackdowns to solve them.

What do you think? What is the best way to stop the drug trade and end addiction? Should some drugs be legalized?

- By Samara Aberman, NewsHour Extra