On the 75th anniversary of the Harrison Narcotic Act that
unleashed the federal anti-drug crusade, historian Richard Lawrence
Miller explores the origins, purposes, and effects of America's
drug war. Thoroughly documented, The Case for Legalizing Drugs
assembles diverse findings by chemists, biologists,
pharmacologists, psychologists, sociologists, anthropologists,
historians, prosecutors, police officers, and drug users
themselves. The resulting mosaic argues that most problems
associated with illicit drugs are caused by laws restricting them.
This book is a realistic appraisal of legalization, vital to anyone
concerned about illicit drugs, public policy, and democracy.
Despite the ineffectiveness and counterproductivity of anti-drug
laws, enthusiasm grows for them. Laws that fail to eliminate drugs
may nonetheless achieve hidden goals. Miller illuminates those
goals and asks whether they are wise. Although drug war proponents
may complain that civil liberties interfere with drug suppression,
Miller argues that the answer is not less democracy, but more. He
presents a message of hope and healing, based upon a century of
scientific research and historical experience, and declares that
legalization would not be a surrender to drugs, but liberation from
them.
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