OnTheIssuesLogo

Noam Chomsky on Drugs

Political Activist


Drug war has focused on blacks and Hispanics

At home, fear of crime--particularly drugs--was stimulated by "a variety of factors that have little or nothing to do with the crime itself," the National Criminal Justice Commission concluded. The results have been described by criminologists as "the American Gulag," "the new American Apartheid," with African Americans now a majority of prisoners for the first time in U.S. history, imprisoned at well over seven times the rate of whites, completely out of the range of arrest rates, which themselves target blacks far out of proportion to drug use or trafficking. Abroad, the threats were to be "international terrorism," "Hispanic narcotraffickers," and most serious of all, "rogue states."
Source: Acts of Aggression, by Noam Chomsky, p. 28-29 Jul 2, 2002

Drug use is falling anyway; drug war is fraudulent

The utterly fraudulent war on drugs was undertaken at a time when everyone knew that use of every drug-even coffee-was falling among educated whites, and was staying sort of level among blacks. The police obviously find it much easier to make an arrest on the streets of a black ghetto than in a white suburb. By now, a very high percentage of incarceration is drug-related, and it mostly targets little guys, somebody who’s caught peddling dope. The big guys are largely ignored.

Drug-related crimes, usually pretty trivial ones, are mostly what’s filling up the prisons. I haven’t seen many bankers or executives of chemical corporations in prison. People in the rich suburbs commit plenty of crimes, but they’re not going to prison at anything like the rate of the poor.

Source: The Common Good, interviews by David Barsamian, p. 35 & 38 Feb 7, 1997

Drug War is an excuse for US military intervention abroad

Now when some client state complains that the US isn’t sending it enough money, they no longer say “we need it to stop the Russians,”-rather, “we need it to stop drug trafficking.” Like the Soviet threat, this enemy provides a good excuse for a US military presence where there’s rebel activity or other unrest.
Source: What Uncle Sam Really Wants, by Noam Chomsky, p. 82-83 Jan 13, 1991

Target tobacco & alcohol instead of marijuana

At the time the drug war was launched, deaths from tobacco were estimated at about 300,000 a year, with perhaps another 100,000 from alcohol. But these aren’t the drugs the Bush administration targeted. It went after illegal drugs, which had caused many fewer deaths-3,500 a year.

The administration also targeted marijuana, which hadn’t caused any known deaths among some 60 million users. In fact, the crackdown exacerbated the drug problem.

Source: What Uncle Sam Really Wants, by Noam Chomsky, p. 83-84 Jan 13, 1991

Other candidates on Drugs: Noam Chomsky on other issues:

Political Leaders:
Pat Buchanan
George W. Bush
Hillary Clinton
Elizabeth Dole
Al Gore
John McCain
Ralph Nader
Robert Reich
Janet Reno
Jesse Ventura

Opinion Leaders:
Noam Chomsky
Bill Clinton
Jesse Jackson
Rush Limbaugh
Ross Perot
Ronald Reagan

Party Platforms:
Democratic Platform
Green Platform
Libertarian Platform
Republican Platform
Abortion
Budget/Economy
Civil Rights
Corporations
Crime
Drugs
Education
Energy/Oil
Environment
Families/Children
Foreign Policy
Free Trade
Govt. Reform
Gun Control
Health Care
Homeland Security
Immigration
Infrastructure/Technology
Jobs
Principles/Values
Social Security
Tax Reform
War/Iraq/Mideast
Welfare/Poverty

Page last updated: 3/31/2008