Supply and Demand

A prime example of the drug war’s backward logic is its distortion of the basic economic principle of supply and demand.  The federal government funnels vast resources into criminal justice and interdiction policies intended to reduce the supply of drugs, while neglecting treatment and education strategies that could help reduce drug demand.  This singular focus on supply reduction has failed to control organized crime syndicates and quell drug trade-related violence.  The sky-high profits of the illegal drug trade ensure that each kingpin who falls will only be replaced with another, making supply-side interdiction a ceaseless battle.  Education and treatment programs yield more permanent reductions in demand through prevention and healing.
 
Internationally, the hypocrisy of American drug policy is clear. Despite being the largest consumer of drugs in the world, the U.S. focuses hugely on supply reduction strategies in other countries while investing little in demand reduction strategies domestically.  We believe the federal government should stop wasting resources on failed supply-side interventions that sustain a violent underground drug trade and instead focus on effective treatment and education programs aimed at addressing the harms and causes of drug misuse.
 

K2/Spice: Establish Restrictions But Don’t Criminalize It

Scheduling K2 as a controlled substance will have unintended detrimental consequences. If K2 were banned outright, young adults could face immediate, devastating and life-long legal barriers to education, employment, voting and government benefits for K2-related drug law violations, despite a lack of evidence of harm to themselves or others. The use of scarce government funds to enforce, prosecute and incarcerate people who use K2 would put a strain on criminal justice resources.

Report of the Global Commission on Drug Policy

June 2, 2011
Global Commission on Drug Policy

The Global Commission, whose members include Kofi Annan and four former presidents, calls the drug war a failure and advocates a paradigm shift in global drug policy. The commission's bold recommendations include encouraging governments to experiment with legalization of drugs, particularly marijuana; putting an end to drug policies being driven by ideology and politics; and directing resources away from arresting and incarcerating so many people for drug law violations.

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