|
Cultural
and Social Analyses
|
Human Rights,
Human Rites (book review)
Crack in America: Demon Drugs and Social Justice Craig Reinarman and
Harry G. Levine, editors University of California Press, 1997 ISBN 0-520-20241-4
In Search of Respect: Selling Crack in el Barrio Philippe Bourgois Cambridge
University Press, 1995 ISBN 0-521-43518-8
Review by Peter Webster©
One
It seemed a good
idea at the time. In December 1948, and with the intention that the
second half of the Twentieth Century should not repeat the unprecedented
human disasters and suffering of the first, the Universal Declaration
of Human Rights was passed unanimously by the United Nations General
Assembly. In the immediate aftermath of two World Wars, the Great
Depression, and a genocide beyond comprehension, there was a natural
and strong resolve to create organizations and establish firm principles
that might finally spur mankind to more humanely guide the course
of events he had so often let descend into barbarity.
Today, although
we hear much impressive rhetoric about human rights, there seems a
general mood that the original idea might have been overly idealistic,
even naive. Many unwritten escape clauses appear to have encroached
upon the originally-stated principles of the Universal Declaration.
We seem to have outgrown that 1948 idealism as if it were a mere style
of thinking and social philosophy, suitable for that time perhaps,
but like all styles, routinely cast off for newer models.
Quite in keeping
with recent styles of social criticism, many of our politicians, writers
and intellectuals have been lecturing us about what might be the duties
and responsibilities of citizens. These self-appointed lights appear
to be saying that although human rights are a fine thing in principle,
there is a wider and more comprehensive paradigm that must be our
guide in today s Brave New World Order. As noted in a recent column
by Ronald Koven in the International Herald Tribune (January 28, 1998),
24 former presidents and prime ministers (including Helmut Schmidt,
Valery Giscard d'Estaing and Jimmy Carter) have proposed for consideration
by the U.N. a companion document to the Universal Declaration of Human
Rights, a "Declaration of Responsibilities". These 24 luminaries
wrote, "exclusive insistence on rights can lead to endless dispute
and conflict."
Article 25 of
the Universal Declaration of 1948, for example, states: "Everyone
has the right to a standard of living adequate for the health and
well-being of himself and his family, including food, clothing, housing
and medical care and necessary social services, and the right to security
in the event of unemployment, sickness, disability, widowhood, old
age or other lack of livelihood." Many exceptions would have
to be appended to just this one Article were we to maintain that it
is honestly and widely practiced, even in the West. For the United
States especially, the long list of escape clauses might begin with,
"Unless you live in an urban slum." There would be no other
way to reconcile Article 25 with facts such as: more than one in four
American children living in poverty; an 18-year waiting list for subsidized
public housing in New York City; and volumes-full of other wrenching
statistics. And it is easy to see how "exclusive insistence"
on such a principle as Article 25 most certainly leads to "endless
dispute and conflict" as the rich and ruling classes bicker incessantly
about how such benefits should 'trickle down' to the less rich who
prove themselves deserving by taking part in the common goals, living
up to their "duties and responsibilities", rather than being
provided outright to a burgeoning class of immoral hedonistic free-loaders.
Caveat number two of the 1948 Declaration might today be, "Such
benefits and rights as listed herein shall be granted only to the
worthy."
Accusations of
flagrant hypocrisy and callous disregard of basic rights attract indignant
denial from those having a big stake in the status quo, to be sure.
Our leaders would no doubt call the above assessment radically-motivated
and insulting -- not a fair interpretation of their true intentions,
(for are not those such as the 24 luminaries of the "Declaration
of Responsibilities" all, honorable men?) Good intentions and
honor must produce more than mere consensus among those professing
them however, and we must search far below the surface into the collective
psychology of the times to discover the reasons why good intentions
and honor can fail so miserably, can produce such serious disparity
between our fine words and our often not-so-fine deeds. Such a search
reveals not merely a few minor irrationalities concerning our post-1948
'maturity and pragmatism', our hubristic notions of world leadership
and control, and the use of OEescape clauses to ignore fundamnetal
principles, but rather that modern man and his times must still be
in the grip of tendencies we believe we outgrew long ago. And as a
prime symptom of such tendencies, there is perhaps no better candidate
than the action we take in response to that mother of all evils, the
clandestine use and traffic in prohibited drugs. Here, our collective
behavior and psychology have descended into an irrationality of some
considerable magnitude.
As a modern 'rite
of purification' no more logical than the mumbo-jumbo of some long-decadent
exorcism we have designated in our midst a devil incarnate, a supreme
evil, and projected upon it not only our fears and prejudices, but
our failings in upholding principles we ourselves know to be inalienable,
principles we can all agree upon in proximity to a great genocide
or World War when the stench of death is fresh in the nostrils, but
principles which, in the very nature of such things, are in the long-run
not practical for the amassing of great power or fortune. The connection
between these latter avarices and the shrouding of same through ceremonial
distractions and scapegoats is neither coincidental nor new to our
times.
Such rituals have
been a constant feature of civilizations both large and small, both
sophisticated and primitive, but seldom have they been performed or
believed as literally as today. The classic scapegoat ritual, in which
a bundle of symbols and attestations representing the accumulated
evils of the city was strapped atop a goat and the poor beast driven
into the wilderness to die, was a ritual taken seriously by perhaps
the simple-minded, but any thinking citizen of those ancient times
knew full well the ceremonial nature of the rite. Today, like the
soap that washes whiter than white, our devils, and our rituals, are
more real than real. We fail even to recognize them as rituals. Confusion
of symbol with reality, ceremony with principle, leads us today to
no small amount of mischief and collective delusion. Illicit drugs
and their users as the devil and scapegoat, and the War on Drugs as
the Rite of Purification is merely a replay of a very old scenario,
and the similarities between the current screenplay and former ones
proves their common authorship. The constant reappearance of this
infamous plot in inquisitions and purges down through history would
indicate that mankind s propensity to enact and re-enact this designating
and extermination of the mythical demon is a very tenacious habit
indeed, and its high-fidelity replay today makes a mockery of the
purported scientific rationality of our age and our insistence that
the principle of human rights is our guiding paradigm. And far worse,
the show has always a disagreeable ending: the latest remake is leading
to destructive tendencies last seen in the 1940s when it was not goats
being prepared for the transport of symbolic accumulated evil but
boxcars bound for Auschwitz.
Two
The two recent books
under review here illustrate in a very definitive way our modern complicity
in the present opus of this recurring ritual persecution, the underlying
psychology of which permits even honorable men to abrogate eternal principles
of human rights in pursuit of mere decadent ceremony. Both books deal
primarily with the latest great incarnation of the archetypical OEdemon
drug and evil-in-our-midst, crack cocaine, but by speaking truth to
established ignorance on this specific topic they succeed once more
in bringing into the cold light of rational thought that great fraud
and crime of Substance Prohibition, responsible for as much human suffering
and misery as many of the great historical crimes we cannot let ourselves
forget.
As with the long
series of books published in the last several years on the destructive
folly of Prohibition, these two volumes would, if rationality, scientific
evidence and common sense were the most effective guides to timely
policy change and the evolution of public opinion, be important enough
to influence immediate and far-reaching changes. They would be as
influential to leaders, intellectuals, and the public as was the knowledge
of the great human tragedies that galvanized our 1948 forebears to
such great works as the Universal Decalaration of Human Rights. The
fact that such books notoriously result in little or no change is
above all a measure of the degeneracy of our times and goals, the
hypocrisy and mendacity of our modern paradigm and belief that we
live in an age of rationality and boundless opportunity for all, guided
by our findings in the sciences and tempered with our humanistic vision
of the sanctity of life; the fact that they do not dispell our mania
forthwith exposes as delusion the paternalistic notion that we have
slowly and painfully transcended our primitive past when superstition
and ignorant ritual predominated and controlled the minds of men.
The books to which I refer show that seldom has the dream and the
reality been more at odds.
In Philippe Bourgois'
now famous study, "e;In Search of Respect: Selling Crack in El
Barrio"e;, an inside view of Spanish Harlem drug culture in New
York City, we have both a literary and anthropological classic: Bourgois
proves himself as 'street-wise' to the locale of his study as were
any of the great anthropologists 'culture-wise' to the societies of
their attention. He lives and works as one of them, and we are not
allowed to view the inhabitants of the world he portrays as members
of some OEprimitive tribe of mere scientific interest, for we are
constantly reminded by the facts he so well presents that "there,
but for the grace of God, might have gone I". The common characteristics
of the drug users and entrepreneurs that supposedly separate them
from mainstream America are shown to be illusory, much as the Jews
in the 1930s were one minute Germans, and by magic spell the next
minute not even human. We find these supposed evil-others of El Barrio
merely to be pursuing the American Dream through the most realistic
mechanism that presents itself under the circumstances, the underground
economy, and so we find not vermin for burning at stake in these ghettos
and Barrios, but we ourselves.
At the very beginning
of the book Bourgois warns us of the danger that such a study might
be used against the poor, might add to the 'blame the victim' tendencies
now so common, or fall prey to a 'racist voyeurism' as do other books
such as the stark pictorial study of inner-city crack cocaine culture,
"Cocaine True, Cocaine Blue"*. His portayal,
read in its entirety however, needs little such warning for it humanizes
the 'public enemies' he has lived intimately with, without at all
sanitizing or glamorizing them. We come to see the inevitability of
the way of life in El Barrio and other such inner-city areas, given
the social and economic structures installed and maintained by the
rich, an inevitability as easy to understand as was that in the former
South Africa under apartheid, or of any other example of a social
system that enforces an apartheid on a class of its citizens.
Bourgois shows
overall that the ritual of drug prohibition allows the middle and
upper classes to scapegoat their guilt and complicity for economic
and racial apartheid: the ignorant rich can look at El Barrio and
say, "these people would be good Americans were it not for drugs,
and see!, once in awhile one of them escapes the dope and the ghetto
and becomes a doctor or lawyer". It is no coincidence that in
the U.S. the Reagan-Bush years saw a great redistribution of wealth
upwards and a corresponding impoverishment of the economically-lowest
strata of American society, and at the same time the great War on
Drugs was instituted providing the cover story for the effects of
this redistribution. Instead of blaming their policies for poverty,
homelessness, unemployment and all the rest, so-called conservatives
could blame demon drugs in an ongoing ritual persecution. The question
should be, "who" is to blame for the ghettos and the drug
problem, not "what".
It would serve
no good end here to present out of context a summary and an analysis
of the several chapters of "In Search of Respect", suffice
it to say that Bourgois leaves no stone unturned, no aspect unexamined
in his valuable study, and it is best read and contemplated as a whole.
By the time he finishes his story of the residents of El Barrio we
know the shame of complicity in having allowed such poverty to arise
and continue in the midst of fabulous wealth, and new meaning comes
to the words, "Inasmuch as ye have done it unto one of the least
of these my brethren, ye have done it unto me." Anyone pretending
to know the least thing about poverty in the U.S., or who has avoided
or rejected the fact that (to quote Bourgois) "Substance abuse
is merely a symptom -- and a vivid symbol -- of deeper dynamics of
social marginalization and alienation," cannot be taken seriously
without having fully read and comprehended this book. Bourgois concludes,
"...we can
safely ignore the drug hysterias that periodically sweep through the
United States. Instead we should focus our ethical concerns and political
energies on the contradictions posed by the persistence of inner-city
poverty in the midst of extraordinary opulence."
The accompanying
statistics reveal all: Between 1968 and 1992 poverty in the U.S. rose
by one-third, with a 100% increase for the number children living
in poverty. And yet, to distract our attention from Article 25 of
the Universal Declaration of Human Rights we now hear lectures about
"duties and responsibilities". To shroud the deeds of that
organized hypocrisy of American-style conservatism we hear the escalating
call to arms against a mythical enemy, in other times a sure harbinger
and esssential seed of fascism. And finally, Bourgois points out the
unfortunate reality of today s America: Political feasibility for
accomplishing any of his recommendations is nil. Never have we needed
clear thinking and political will power more, and never has it been
so remote. If required changes are deemed impossible, it is difficult
to avoid the conclusion that America is headed for decline and catastrophe,
and the pitiful posturing and ill-advised tampering being done instead
is not so much a re-arranging of the furniture on the Titanic as tossing
it overboard in hopes of slowing the sinking. And it seems that the
third-class passengers, the inner city poor, are included as if mere
furniture.
Three
"Crack in America"
is another of those long and sometimes badly-organized collections of
papers assembled into a composite whole, and for which the editors have
usually written interludes in the attempt to tie together the diverse
viewpoints. Whether it is the importance and unifying nature of the
subject matter, or the expertise of Craig Reinarman and Harry G. Levine
as editors however, (it is probably both), this collection is superb,
and among the included papers are some of the most powerfual and convincing
of any ever written on the subject of Drug Prohibition and its reform.
The book has "a
thematic and conceptual unity uncommon in edited collections,"
say the editors, and may be read as if it were the report of an expert
commission charged with a specific task. And not least in importance
or quality are the several papers written by the editors themselves:
they go far beyond the mere unifying interludes seen in other such
books. From their opening essay in chapter 1, "Crack in Context,"
through to their concluding remarks in chapter 17, "Real Opposition,
Real Alternatives: Reducing the Harms of Drug Use and Drug Policy,"
there is no letup in a devastating indictment of Drug Prohibition.
And lest the reader might misinterpret the content of the book from
its title, let me stress that "Crack in America" is not
just about crack cocaine. It certainly is the definitve work on this
subject, but the collection of views and facts presented here make
the book a definitive volume on the 'drug problem' as a whole, on
the stupidities, contradictions and delusions of Prohibition in general
and the critical need and recommendations for reversing this utterly
failed policy.
We discover early
on in the book, in chapter two, "The Crack Attack: Politics and
Media in the Crack Scare," exactly where the editors place the
blame for the crack hysteria. After meticulous examination of the
evidence, we read under the subtitle "The New Right and its Moral
Ideology" a similar accusation to those I have made above and
elsewhere. We see in the post-Watergate rebuilding of the Republican
Party and the emergence of the "New Right" the vehicle through
which the re-enactment of the ancient scapegoat scenario has so malignantly
reoccurred:
"Crack was
a godsend to the Right. They used it and the drug issue as an ideological
fig leaf to place over the unsightly urban ills that had increased
markedly under Reagan administration social and economic policies.
OEThe drug problem served conservative politicians as an all-purpose
scapegoat."
A stark and ugly
truth, the tragedy and irrationality of it all surpassed only by the
gullibility of a large segment of the public in voting for it.
Among the authors
represented in the central chapters of the book are John P. Morgan
and Lynn Zimmer, and their essay "The Social Pharmacology of
Smokeable Cocaine: Not All It s Cracked Up To Be" is, like their
recent book "Marijuana Myths, Marijuana Facts", a one-stop
all-purpose handbook of facts, statistics, and copious references
exploding all current Prohibitionist myths and mendacities about the
drugs. One might say it is even too powerful in its completeness and
authority, for it leaves no other position but utter shame for the
Prohibitionists and Drug Warriors who have manufactured and broadcast
these myths. Like Nixon insisting to the end that he "had no
knowlege of the crime," the Drug Warriors have no alternative
but obfuscation and pitiful intransigence in reply to such powerful
exposition. And although dyed-in-the-wool Drug Warriors will, like
Nixon, never admit nor even perhaps suspect the wrongness of their
position, they may at least be stimulated to statements and acts which,
again like Nixon, make it transparently obvious to an increasing section
of the public that they are very wrong indeed and should simply be
ignored and removed from positions of influence as soon as possible.
Other important
essays of the book concern the comparison of the 'crack epidemic'
in America with that in other countries, and surprise of surprises,
we discover that it is practically non-existent elsewhere. Even in
such a 'drug-liberal' country as Holland, as Peter Cohen shows in
his "Crack in the Netherlands: Effective Social Policy is Effective
Drug Policy," crack use is almost impossible to find, even in
Amsterdam. Likewise, in "Crack in Australia: Why is There No
Problem?" by Stephen K. Mugford, we read the author s reason:
"The central point, simply put, is that Australia does not have
an underclass in the same way that the U.S. does." In Cohen s
essay we read, "In the history of modern [drug] use in the Netherlands,
the political system has never had to cope with drug use as visible
proof of the deep impoverishemnt of a large segment of the population."
But conservatives in the U.S. continue to insist that drugs cause,
and are not just symptoms of the problems they themsleves have done
so much to create. Neither does typical U.S. Drug Warrior rhetoric
that crack cocaine "is the most addictive drug ever known"
or that crack is an "epidemic that spreads like a plague"
stand up well in the face of such international evidence. In light
of the evidence, such claims seem the ravings of fools.
In part 3 of Crack
in America we find an analysis of the "Price of Repression,"
and the chapter here by Ira Glasser and Loren Siegel, the title of
which is a quotation of Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall, "When
Constitutional Rights Seem Too Extravagant to Endure," is the
most superb essay to be seen on the topic of the erosion of Constitutional
rights inherent in the methods and practices of Drug Prohibition.
The chapter is a resounding indictment of the abandonment of the very
founding principles of a free society for which America has long been
famous, all in the name of a "New Right" frenzy of scapegoating
and ritual persecution. The eventual price of repression of drugs
is shown to be very expensive indeed, an abrogation of rights and
freedoms that once removed will in all probability be impossible to
restore.
Not until the
end of the book however, do Reinarman and Levine state something that
should have been shouted from the rooftops long ago, something that
needs to be repeatedly and insistently interjected into every debate
and every forum about drug policy reform from here until the repeal
of Prohibition, or totalitarian doomesday, whichever occurs first.
The authors call it "the dirty little secret of drug prohibition":
"The dirty
little secret of drug prohibition is that most recreational users
find their drug experiences valuable for a wide variety of reasons,
including physical pleasure, release from stress, mental health, spirituality,
intellectual stimulation, self-medication, enhanced sociability, or
just plain fun. And because their drug use arises from these purposes
rather than some pathology, the vast majority do not become abusers
or addicts." (p358)
Dirty little secret,
yes. And "recreational users," again contrary to the myth
promulgated by the drug warriors, are by far the largest category,
classic addiction being far more prevalent in the imaginings of Prohibitionists
and Hollywood productions. Even the 'hoods' in El Barrio "enjoy"
their snort of coke or heroin, and from all available information
most are no more 'addicted' than many of the middle class are to their
daily doses of coffee, cigarettes, a couple of beers, mood-changing
prescription drugs, sleeping remedies, et al. The experience of these
hard drugs fits in quite well with the sorry details of the lives
these inner city poor are coping with, just as the coffee in the morning
and couple of brews after work fits in with the experience of middle
class life. Attempting to suppress the one as ultimate evil while
denying that the other is precisely the same phenomenon is more than
hypocrisy, it is criminally insane.
Will drug legalization
result in a massive increase in drug use? Very probably not, for the
many reasons so well documented in these and many other informative,
well-researched books and publications. Even if legalization did result
in greater use of drugs overall, it is likely that the drugs preferentially
chosen would be the less harmful ones, and less harmful forms of drugs.
Several observers have pointed out that prohibitions have inevitably
favored the production, smuggling, dealing, and use of harder, more
concentrated and dangerous forms of the prohibited substances, or
even the use of more dangerous drugs instead of the less dangerous,
much as the War on Drugs has been shown to have promoted the use of
cocaine and heroin over marijuana. And even if there was an increase
in drug use we would have to assume that the great majority of that
drug use would be voluntary and effectively self-controlled, just
as it is now, and undertaken for the reasons listed above in the quotation
from Reinarman and Levine.
In other words,
people would freely decide that they wished to use their chosen drugs,
just as they do now with alcohol, tobacoo, coffee and tea, et al.
And who shall have the authority to decide what a person may or may
not read, see, speak, or take, without in so doing removing an important
portion of his rights in a free society? Is not the pursuit of happiness,
insight, religion and enlightenment, and even mere enjoyment the most
fundmental of human rights? If a person willingly and freely decides
that the best way to pursue such inalienable rights is through the
use of a book, an organization, a doctrine, a religion, or a drug,
all of which might certainly be 'harmful' to some in certain circumstances,
who today is so morally superior "as evidenced by his deeds"
that he can in good conscience prohibit "any" such activity
or method? We cannot restrict any such rights without falling into
an unavoidable march to totalitarian control of society. If drug use
increases, so be it: we cannot object to that if we do not object
that citizens may make other such personal decisions about their activities
and behavior. Once the principle is installed that one group, the
government, or even a sizeable majority shall decide what books, plays,
music, speech, political parties, "or drugs" shall be prohibited,
we no longer have a free and open society, but the unstoppable seeds
of totalitarianism. If not soon reversed, Drug Prohibition will inevitably
evolve into the greatest tyranny the world has known.
If the reader
can accept the principle of human rights when it comes to some of
the items in my list but feels compelled to draw the line before the
last item, 'drugs,' his resistance can only result from hidden prejudices
and the decadent psychology of scapegoating and ritual persecution
as I have discussed above, for there is simply not the evidence nor
logical argument allowing the drawing of such a line. To such an objector
it will no doubt seem odd to be going on at length about human rights
and eternal principles of civilization in a review of two books about
a rather gritty and unproductive drug. But it is again a measure of
the sickness of the times that the errors of our thinking run so deep
that we can believe a major absurdity and crime such as Prohibition
is a policy intended to improve the world and its inhabitants, ignoring
completely the evidence all around us. At every opportunity those
who can see the great lie of Prohibition and its purported intentions
must, as a humanitarian duty, broadcast the message. And these two
books do so, very effectively, and from several different perspectives.
They illustrate yawning chasms of willful ignorance in our philosophy
and political directions rather than mere petty details of some minor
problem. They lead to the unavoidable conclusion that our policies,
collective intentions, and our very thoughts on the subject of Prohibition
are not at all guided by human rights and principles of civilized
living, and certainly not by logic and rationality, but by imaginary
demons, hates, ritual persecutions and prejudices as old as evil itself.
Continually and
repeatedly we create in our midst a portion of ourselves who we can
hate, imprison, exterminate, and our overt reasons for doing so change
their garb just enough each time to make the ritual convincing, until
the inevitable genocide and destruction once again makes us temporarily
penitent. With the War on Drugs we have created a class of the hated
larger than the Jews, larger than the Communists, larger than the
heretics of the Middle Ages, larger than the exterminated Native Americans,
larger than any previous ritually-unclean class of persons, and if
the process again ends in genocide and war, it is difficult to imagine
that "any" penitence, "any" establishment of United
Nations organizations and Universal Declarations will be more than
a joke. There is no risk whatever in overstressing the urgency of
the task of changing course immediately and radically concerning our
present policies on prohibited drugs and drug prohibition as a means
to desirable ends.
The conclusion
we must take away from the reading of these books is that the 'addiction'
we believe we are making war against in inner-city America is far
more a self-medication, far more an effective but risky method for
self-transcendence than a devil requiring exorcism. Concerning self-transcendence,
as both Andrew Weil (The Natural Mind, 1972) and Ronald Siegal (Intoxication,
1989) have persuasively argued, the use of various methods including
drugs to attain higher, or at least different conscious states is
as natural and instinctual as other of the basic human drives, and
the suppression such activity, especially on moralistic grounds, is
neither moral nor possible. We might as well try to argue a moral
case against hunger or thirst, (not that such absurdities have not
sometimes been attempted by fundamentalists). And as Thomas Szasz
has argued in his "Ceremonial Chemistry", the only logical
way to look at such drug use is to consider it ceremonial and ritual,
in the original sense of these terms, not merely empty performance
of inherently meaningless gestures but as actual magical and efficacious
recipes for modifying consciousness. As such, if we wish to insist
on the preservation of human rights in principle, we certainly must
include rights to those human needs which we know to be instinctual
and universal, those which grant to mankind the seeking of his most
basic needs and drives.
| "The only freedom which counts is the freedom to do what
some other people think to be wrong. There is no point in demanding
freedom to do that which all will applaud. All the so-called liberties
or rights are things which have to be asserted against others
who claim that if such things are to be allowed their own rights
are infringed or their own liberties threatened. This is always
true, even when we speak of the freedom to worship, of the right
of free speech or association, or of public assembly. If we are
to allow freedoms at all there will constantly be complaints that
either the liberty itself or the way in which it is exercised
is being abused, and, if it is a genuine freedom, these complaints
will often be justified. There is no way of having a free society
in which there is not abuse. Abuse is the very hallmark of liberty."
|
| Hailsham, The Dilemma of Democaracy |
*"
Cocaine True, Cocaine Blue", a photographic panorama of cocaine
users in three different inner-city areas by the photographer Eugene
Richards. Published by Aperture Foundation, 1994.
|