IT’S PAST TIME FOR CONGRESS TO RE-LEGALIZE HEROIN: RE-PUBLISH FROM CATO INSTITUTE 2020, ARTICLE PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER “Legalize Heroin To Save Lives | Opinion,” HARM REDUCTION PART-2.

HARM REDUCTION PRT-2

Our infatuation with prohibition, and our unease with drug use, are killing tens of thousands every year.

Drug legalization should no longer be seen as a radical position, writes the Cato Institute’s Trevor Burrus. Darwin Brandis / Getty Images/iStockphoto

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NORMAN J CLEMENT RPH., DDS, NORMAN L. CLEMENT PHARM-TECH, MALACHI F. MACKANDAL PHARMD, BELINDA BROWN-PARKER, IN THE SPIRIT OF JOSEPH SOLVO ESQ., IN THE SPIRIT OF REV. C.T. VIVIAN, JELANI ZIMBABWE CLEMENT, BS., MBA., IN THE SPIRIT OF ERLIN CLEMENT SR., WILLIE GUINYARD BS., JOSEPH WEBSTER MD., MBA, BEVERLY C. PRINCE MD., FACS., LEROY BAYLOR,   JAY K. JOSHI MD., MBA, ADRIENNE EDMUNDSON, ESTER HYATT PH.D., WALTER L. SMITH BS., IN THE SPIRIT OF BRAHM FISHER ESQ., MICHELE ALEXANDER MD., CUDJOE WILDING BS, MARTIN NDJOU, BS., RPH., IN THE SPIRIT OF DEBRA LYNN SHEPHERD, BERES E. MUSCHETT, STRATEGIC ADVISORS

THE ARTICLE RE-PUBLISHED IN THE PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER REFERRED TO THIS BLOG BY JEFF SINGER MD., SENIOR FELLOW OF CATO INSTITUTE

This article is a Two Part series on Re-legalizing Heroin. We have enclosed Part-1 here

By Trevor Burrus, For The Inquirer Updated Oct 4, 2021

“With 93,000 dead last year, America’s overdose crisis has reached new heights. Deaths were up 29% over 2019, which exceeded the expectations of many who anticipated a significant increase. More Americans die each year of overdoses than died in any war except the Civil War and World War II. Tragically, prohibition is the primary cause of these deaths, and we could save tens of thousands of lives next year if we legalized drugs, especially opiates.

Over the past decade, fentanyl has been the primary cause of overdoses, and prohibition is the main reason it has become so common in our drug supply. Fentanyl is a synthetic opioid that is around 100 times more potent than heroin. Although it varies between users, the lethal dose of fentanyl is about three milligrams, which is just a few dozen grains. Users are increasingly unknowingly consuming drugs tainted with fentanyl, and their normal dose suddenly becomes lethal.

» READ MORE: As Oregon decriminalizes drugs, Philly officials are paying close attention

Prohibition caused this fentanyl-overdose epidemic because those who smuggle alcohol into a sporting event prefer flasks to a 12-pack. When a substance has to be smuggled, the smuggler prefers the highest potency, the smallest version.

Captain Peter Christ (Ret.) Demolishes the War on Drugs
Drug policy reform is a core focus of the Law Enforcement Action Partnership. First established as Law Enforcement Against Prohibition in 2002, LEAP was co-founded by Police Captain Peter Christ (Ret.). A 20-year law enforcement veteran of the War on Drugs, Captain Christ has been speaking out to end drug prohibition since 1989. He co-founded LEAP with the mission of reducing harmful consequences resulting from fighting the war on drugs and lessening the incidence of death, disease, crime, and addiction by ending drug prohibition. LEAP thanks Captain Christ for his extraordinary vision – there’s no better way to learn about drug policy than to hear it from him!
Watch as Captain Christ demolishes every argument for the War on Drugs in this viral video.

During alcohol prohibition, beer and wine almost disappeared from the market. And while spirits accounted for about 40% of alcohol sales before prohibition, that jumped to 90% after. The price of beer also rose an estimated 700%.

This is called the iron law of prohibition, and it works against the most optimistic goals of prohibitionists. Crackdown on smuggling at the border, and you won’t decrease the number of users; you’ll increase the drug’s potency. Compulsive drug users aren’t suddenly “cured” by a lack of supply because prohibition primarily changes the nature of the drug supply, not whether the drug is available.

A REAL GREEK SALAD/ S.AFRICA
GREEK SALAD, CAPE TOWN, SOUTH AFRICA

Unfortunately, the pandemic ramped up the vicious logic of the iron law of prohibition. Travel restrictions at the borders and limits on international trade made drug smuggling more difficult. Obeying this iron law, smugglers increasingly preferred fentanyl.

Just this past summer, one man was caught on a bus with 28 pounds of fentanyl, enough to kill 4.2 million Americans. If he had chosen instead to smuggle heroin, he would have had to carry 2,800 pounds to achieve the same potency. As of May, more fentanyl was seized at the border than in all of 2020. In the past three years, Border Patrol agents say they’ve seen a 4,000% increase in Fentanyl seizures.

“When do we say enough is enough and admit that drugs won the war we’ve long waged against them?”

Trevor Burrus

But don’t think those seizures meaningfully diminish the amount of fentanyl in America’s drug supply. While U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) and the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) love to have press conferences touting their enforcement efforts, fentanyl is just too easy to get into the country or manufacture here. And if CBP and DEA want to crack down on smuggling even more, smugglers can always change to carfentanil, which is terrifyingly 100 times more potent than fentanyl. In fact, that’s already occurring.

When do we say enough is enough and admit that drugs won the war we’ve long waged against them?

“When do we say enough is enough and admit that drugs won the war we’ve long waged against them?”Trevor Burrus

UPDATE COPS PRACTICING MEDICINE

But don’t think those seizures meaningfully diminish the amount of fentanyl in America’s drug supply. While U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) and the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) love to have press conferences touting their enforcement efforts, fentanyl is just too easy to get into the country or manufacture here. And if CBP and DEA want to crack down on smuggling even more, smugglers can always change to carfentanil, which is terrifyingly 100 times more potent than fentanyl. In fact, that’s already occurring.

Agency of Corruption and racism
The DEA has acted as an Unregulated medical agency policing medical facilities and medical practices without legal standards and grounds, and the DEA Administration Court System body, which operates within the Department of Justice (DOJ), as a runaway unconstitutionally entity, and immune to all laws of governance to all courts within the Justice System.

When do we say enough is enough and admit that drugs won the war we’ve long waged against them?

There have been laudable efforts to solve the overdose crisis in other ways, and they need more attention. For example, Narcan, a drug that can stop overdoses, is being more widely distributed. Fentanyl test strips are also becoming more common, and some municipalities are distributing them for free.

» READ MORE: Atlantic City’s syringe exchange is suing the city over efforts to close it

Yet, if you understand the iron prohibition law, these are half-measures at best. Nothing will come close to saving as many lives as legalization. Our infatuation with prohibition, and our unease with drug use, is killing tens of thousands every year. It has to stop.

Drug legalization can take a variety of forms. Alcohol, after all, isn’t just legal. Licenses are required for commercial sales, and there is a drinking age. Some over-the-counter drugs like Sudafed are legal but require an ID to purchase. Many other legal drugs are prescription only.

SOTUH AFRICAN MIRRURRIEL
UNTIL IT’S DONE

Whatever system we choose, legalizing heroin and fentanyl will immediately save lives. Street opiates are tainted and of uncertain potency, but pharmaceutical-grade opiates are perfectly safe to take in the proper amount.

Doctors and nurses inject dangerous opiates into patients thousands of times per day, and they do it with confidence because they know what drug they are administering and how much to give. Recreational heroin users are capable of doing the same thing. After all, it’s their life.

Will there still be overdose deaths if we legalized heroin? Absolutely, and quite a few, just as there are still many deaths from alcohol abuse. Yet if we found out that thousands were dying from alcohol tainted with poison, we would first address that problem. After we stop the thousands of unnecessary deaths, we can start rationally dealing with other problems associated with drug and alcohol abuse.

Drug legalization should no longer be seen as a radical position. The radicals are those who, in the face of nearly 100,000 overdose deaths, still believe “cracking down” is the answer. Radical times call for rational solutions.”

Trevor Burrus is a research fellow in the Cato Institute’s Robert A. Levy Center for Constitutional Studies and editor‐in‐chief of the Cato Supreme Court ReviewPublished Oct. 4, 2021

TB TREVOR BURRUS, FOR THE INQUIER

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