
(Ollie Harridge / Flickr / Creative Commons)
Originally posted on In These Times
When a hail of bullets extinguished dozens of lives at an elementary school last month, the ugly consequences of the nation’s gun culture shot into the media spotlight. The debate around gun control in the aftermath of Newtown has yielded confused policy proposals like further militarizing schools, or preemptively tracking mentally ill people.
But a key aspect of the gun-control debate remains hiding in plain sight. There’s a major driver of gun violence in the U.S. that is neither the bloodlust of the “criminally insane” nor the weakness of public security forces. Failed gun policy is a manifestation of another, arguably more expansive, irrational policy regime: the War on Drugs. While the most spectacular incidents of mass murder spark public panic, a more relevant, yet typically ignored, source of gun violence lies in the brutality born of the gun industry’s marriage to drug prohibition policies.
For decades, the federal government has sought to eradicate drugs despite the utter futility of the effort and the devastating social, health and economic consequences of its tactics. While Sandy Hook triggered a national convulsion of disgust, the everyday casualties of the drug war have been met with relative silence. With annual gun homicides nationwide hovering around 10,000, a significant portion can be directly or indirectly linked to drug violence, though estimates for the death toll vary widely. (A recent CDC study of gang homicides, for example, notes that over 90 percent involve guns and the portion in different cities that were drug-related ranged from under five to about 25 percent.) Other analyses of national and international data likewise suggest a range of proportions depending on how drug-related killing is defined. Whatever the exact figure, the bottom line is that the drug war’s institutionalized violence and oppression, fueled by “tough on crime” law enforcement, inflicts deep, needless social trauma on vulnerable communities. Underpinning that climate of violence are broader societal factors that also tend to be ignored in gun debates, including class and racial polarization.
Such tragedies seem worlds away from Newtown’s massacre–perhaps because we’ve been sensitized over the years to accept the drug prohibition as a social imperative. In reality, the nation’s enormously costly and destructive drug war greases the mechanics of our “culture” of gun violence, as much of the institutionalized violence is bound up with a policy regime that causes systematic harm in the name of public “safety.”
Historical data [PDF] reveals realities what today’s politicians refuse to face. In his recent summary of criminological and sociological research on long-term homicide rates, Yale legal scholar Dan Kahan found that U.S. homicide trends were directly tied both to alcohol prohibition in the 1920s and to the modern prohibition of drugs like marijuana and cocaine:
The weight of the evidence pretty convincingly shows that drug-related homicides generated as a consequence of drug prohibition are tremendously high and account for much of the difference in the homicide rates in the U.S. and those in comparable liberal market societies.
Kahan explains that “the criminogenic properties of drug prohibition create both a demand for murder of one’s competitors and a demand for guns to use for that purpose.” In other words, gun homicides can be traced to the synergy between booming gun markets and flourishing illicit drug markets, because a high-stakes illegal economy requires “enforcement” outside the law through coercion and force.
Kahan tells In These Times that, as part of a broad dialogue on realistic policy approaches to gun homicide, “our society ought to examine the ways in which our current drug-regulation policies themselves generate the sort of violence characteristic of black markets.”
Certainly, Kahan’s findings should complicate the public conversation. While simply legalizing or decriminalizing drugs won’t necessarily end all the violence, an overhaul of drug policy seems a far more effective strategy to cut incentives for killing than the twisted lock-’em-up tactics of the last four decades.
Though just how best to change the system is debatable. Kahan suggests, “We could substantially reduce the number of gun homicides in our nation by reducing the emphasis on incarceration and strict crackdown-types of enforcement policies, and moving to some combination of legal markets and highly regulated public health alternatives to criminal law.”
However, drug war violence in the U.S. must also be understood as one strain of a transnational epidemic of drug-related brutality. Globally, the drug business and the business of firearms are deeply intertwined. A 2010 Washington Post report details how U.S. guns have become a hot commodity at the border:
Drug cartels have aggressively turned to the United States because Mexico severely restricts gun ownership….. Federal authorities say more than 60,000 U.S. guns of all types have been recovered in Mexico in the past four years, helping fuel the violence that has contributed to 30,000 deaths.
Legal U.S. gun markets, which are sheltered by the gun industry’s army of lobbyists, served as the interface for the Mexican black market in firearms that has played a role in many thousands of deaths, according to a 2009 analysis [PDF] by the Congressional Research Service:
Mexican drug trafficking organizations (DTOs) are increasingly sending enforcers across the border to hire surrogates (straw purchasers) who buy several ‘military-style’ firearms at a time from [federal firearms licensees].
Guns, bullets and body counts—all of which America produces in extreme numbers—don’t tell the whole story of our violent culture, which is woven into the social structures we’re taught to respect as emblems of “civilization.” The drug war escalates the climate of violence through various forms, from the street, the state and the psychology of alienation and mistrust that it breeds. There is the mass incarceration that disproportionately impacts youth of color and their communities. Then there are innumerable casualties of draconian “border security” policies, which not only contribute to horrendous violent threats facing economic migrants, but also deepen the instability and oppression plaguing Latin American communities at the margins of Washington’s garrison state.
The American brand of power operates through a continuum of warfare: from Pentagon drone targets to mass school shootings and neighborhood gang battles, and exported across the border to the blood-stained streets of Ciudad Juarez. Yet in the political arena, the boundaries of public compassion have tightened while the global scale of the casualties continually expands.Sandy Hook shocked the nation because of the seeming freakishness of its carnage, but what should truly alarm us about guns in America is the banality of the drug-war-fueled violence that enforces profound racial, economic and social divides. For all the divisions in how gun violence is experienced by different communities, we’re all endangered by laws that erode humanity instead of securing it.



8 Comments

Thank you for the analysis – yes, repealing prohibition is the keystone to ending many kinds of horror.
And from the corporate media on this subject: (crickets)
You want to take a big step towards reducing gun violence? Decriminalize drugs. All of them. Stop the cycle of punitive laws leading to cheap prison labor for a few corporations in institutions that teach their pupils, the convicts, only how to be better criminals. Treat drug addiction for what it is–an illness–and provide free treatment for its victims.
As Prohibition and its repeal proved beyond a reasonable doubt, legalization, regulation, and taxation of a prohibited drug, in that case alcohol, took away the need of its peddlers to go around well-armed.
I’m not advocating legalized heroin dispensaries open to the general public, but treating addicts, like the British Health Service does, instead of incarcerating them just saves time, money, and makes sense. As for the dealers of such things as heroin and methamphetamine, guaranteeing them a decent lifestyle by legitimate means would take away a lot of the incentive that now exists to get rich quick by selling illegal drugs.
Such a social policy would be a positive good. But there’s one big reason why that cannot even be considered here in America: there’s no profit in it. Capitalism profits from the current system: for-profit prisons are the most egregious example. Furthermore, the underground drug culture serves to divide the working and middle classes against themselves, thus further entrenching our ruling oligarchy in political power.
Bah! Back to football. Great post. Recc’d.
And law enforcement makes out with the proceed generated through property seizures. Here they will seize one’s property and if you are found not guilty, you must petition for the return of your property. In an instance involving some acquaintances, their property had already been sold off (a nice car and all of the contents).
Plus all the surplus goodies that the DoD provides to the various flavors of law enforcement. Armored vehicles, helicopters, weapons, the list is long and disgusting.
A little music addressing this situation Winning the war on drugs
So very well stated for a Barbarian, I must say, but a real impediment to the solution to the problem is that there is a militarized police force in this country that has evolved because of these insane drug laws that have been nothing more than an excuse for the “Law” to stick their noses into other peoples lives in the name of “public safety”.
Any solution, in my view, has to have these goons disarmed so they can’t be the first shooters in encounters.
I agree that America should follow the Portuguese model and take the money out of drugs and profit motive will dry up and we might be able to get sanity to return. I done just about every drug worth doing and it’s not that big a deal. Cocaine is just a lousy short term stimulant that is really not worth the money and is just stylized by Hollywood.
I think they should add some cocaine to every alcoholic beverage sold as it once was when the pope and the president drank to be refreshed.
These idiots in control are only interested in power and money and I don’t think that will ever change and is one of the reasons the country hates cops en masse! They’ve abused people for too long. Take their guns away and make them traffic cops.
what a racket
Thanks. But, remember this. The police are as working class as you or I. In the end, or the beginning for that matter, we will need them and they will need us. They ARE us, and vice-versa.
No revolution is successful without at least the tacit support of the police and the military. The ranks, not the management.
What! Back to football? Fie on such pusillanimous behavior! Check out Transition Towns – a way of making corporations irrelevant, just by turning one’s back on them and creating a new reality. (Yes, we can do that, too.) Very Gandhi-an response to peak oil, climate change, and economic disruption – make ALL your economic activity within your local community.
US intelligence services have been notorious at trading guns for drugs. Iran-Contra comes to mind. Ending the War on Drugs does seem like a step in the right direction on gun violence. The guns traded for drugs are usually assault weapons, so if drugs are no longer contraband, there will be diminished opportunity for such trading, and less reason to do it.
Recommended.