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An Embarrassing Interview With the Drug Czar

Rolling Stone's June issue takes an in-depth look at the evolving political climate surrounding drug policy (a portion is available online), including a deliciously embarrassing visit with drug czar Gil Kerlikowske. Remember Kerlikowske's recent statement about not calling it a "war on drugs" anymore? Well, guess what he's got in his office:

…despite this sudden outbreak of sanity, rumors of the drug war's death are greatly exaggerated. Visitors to the drug czar's office in Washington – formally known as the Office of National Drug Control Policy – are greeted by the visage of Uncle Sam on a poster declaring, WE ARE AT WAR. ARE YOU DOING ALL YOU CAN?

You really couldn’t ask for a better exhibit in the total incoherence and rank dishonesty of the drug czar's claim that our drug policy isn’t a war. I don't blame him for trying and it's certainly encouraging that we've reached a point at which the drug war is so controversial that they're trying to change its name. But how could they possibly forget to take down the damn sign? I mean, really, did they forget that Rolling Stone was stopping by?

The story goes on to brilliantly juxtapose Kerlikowske's law-enforcement credentials against his comical inability to answer basic questions about the issues he works on:

Yet when faced with questions about national drug policy, he can turn as evasive as Sarah Palin without a teleprompter. Does the tripling of marijuana arrests since 1990 represent good policy? He'd like to look at the issue more closely. Would the feds respect the laws of states that vote to legalize marijuana consumption for adults? A great question, he says – but one he won’t venture to answer. Does the U.S. experience with Plan Columbia provide a template for dealing with the violent cartels in Mexico? He just doesn't know. "After three weeks, I'm still finding my way around the office," he says with a laugh.

The whole thing is a brutal embarrassment and a vivid illustration of the appalling intellectual bankruptcy that characterizes the government's position on drug policy in general. These are extremely basic policy questions, but they have serious implications. If you can't even begin to make informative statements about federal policy, then what right do you have to dismiss calls for reform? Is there even a shred of legitimacy to Kerlikowke's opposition to legalization if he can't even tell us what the current policy is supposed to be?

We spend billions of dollars and imprison millions of people in honor of this great anti-drug crusade and the people running the whole thing in Washington can’t even figure out what to call it, let alone give us a straight answer about why any of this is in the best interest of the nation. In fairness, Kerlikowske's reluctance to defend or even discuss drug policy is a product of the reform movement's success at politicizing the issue and his silence likely owes more to caution than bald ignorance. Still, one is generally considered to have won the debate when their opponent refuses to speak.

 At this point, I'd only be mildly surprised to see these guys just clam up entirely and announce that our drug policy can't be publicly discussed for national security reasons.

Politics & Advocacy ONDCP

Humiliated?

Isn’t that part of a drug czar’s job?  Four to eight years of public humiliation, ending with a fat federal pension check and maybe a bogus job in some neo-con think tank?

I suppose the trick to being drug czar is the ability to crawl up one’s own ass and pretend the big bad world doesn’t exist.  Another might be possessing an aptitude for paying no attention to the consequences of one’s official actions.  Stir the shit-storm for awhile and walk away with unending bucks.  What a deal.

The drug czar’s job may be unique in that no one seriously expects the czar to succeed.  How can you go wrong?  Maybe a drug czar could win the drug war and really screw things up for a lot of people in the judicial industrial complex, but we know that can’t happen.  People will never give up harmless and effective euphoriants.  The drugs black market is inelastic.  Touché.  Drugs win.  Or, alternatively, the drug warriors win by conning enough people into trusting them as they chase an impossible goal.

Ending the drug war comes down to making a rational choice between who wins and who loses.  The feds don’t want to lose face.  Okay.  But given all the other government failures we've witnessed, what’s a failed drug war, anyway?  Another grain of sand added to endless, windswept dunes.

Giordano

Malkavian's picture

It's a politician thing ...

It is ONLY in religion and politics that people make light of or even hold forth as an advantage their horrible, abysmal ignorance. These people are at the very top of the power ladder, and if they fart the wrong way people start dying. That's why we should ask for experts in those positions instead of ignorant, stupid people.

And we should definitely not make apologies for them.


Re: not perfect

I didn't say this was more of the same. My point is that it's quite remarkable how unwilling/unable he is to answer basic questions about our drug policy. Today, the drug czar's website is bragging about all the marijuana busts in Florida, but he couldn't even tell Rolling Stone whether or not increased marijuana arrests are good policy?

This blog exists to challenge the war on drugs and its leaders. I will not sit around idly and wait to see what they do next month or next year. The drug war is raging as we speak and we will rage against it every day until it ends.

And I assure you, if Kerlikowske does anything good, you will find positive coverage here.

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