By Theodora Blanchfield on 11.11.03 @ 12:04AM
Jacob Sullum vs. drug warriors -- and drug enthusiasts.
With the title Saying Yes: In Defense of Drug Use,
you'd think that Jacob Sullum was another hippie trying to get
drugs legalized so he could enjoy that big fat joint emblazoned on
the book's dust jacket. And you would be oh so wrong. In 284
tightly argued pages, plus notes, Sullum, a senior editor for the
libertarian Reason magazine and author of For Your Own
Good: The Anti-Smoking Crusade and the Tyranny of Public
Health, cuts through the myriad myths of anti-drug arguments
to press his case that, for most people, drugs are not
mind-snatchers leaving their users a hollowed out shell of who they
once were.
The first chapter of Saying Yes (Tarcher/Putnam, 340
pages, $25.95) takes exception to the popular belief, held by
Mormons and Muslims, among others, that all "psychoactive
substances are so dangerous that they should be avoided
altogether." While most secular anti-drug types would agree with
this for narcotics, they don't believe this holds true for alcohol,
because alcohol use can be controlled.
However, that is a tenuous distinction at best. Sullum asks, How
different is the use of alcohol from that of other drugs? Answer:
Alcohol is legal, which makes it more socially acceptable. As for
the argument that it is more damaging than most illegal substances,
he reminds readers that alcohol is a "toxin" that causes
dizziness, headache, vomiting, and blackouts; impairs
speech, judgment, coordination, cognition, and memory; and
depresses respiration, which can lead to death after a single
drinking session. Withdrawal symptoms include rapid heart rate,
shortness of breath, chills, fever, chest pain, nausea with
recurrent vomiting, abdominal pain, hallucinations, and seizures,
sometimes resulting in death. Alcohol users suffer from peptic
ulcers, liver failure, pancreatic cysts, high blood pressure,
stroke, metabolic abnormalities, malnutrition, lung and urinary
tract infections, brain damage, and cancers of the mouth, larynx,
esophagus, pancreas, liver, stomach, colon and breast. Alcohol use
is also associated with depression, suicide, unemployment, divorce,
domestic violence, assault, homicide, and vehicular
accidents.
Put that way, why would anyone want to drink? But they
do: Contra the arguments of prohibitionists, there are millions of
people that drink everyday in a social manner without becoming
belligerent or impaired. And Sullum, armed with a brace of studies,
statistics, and anecdotes, demonstrates that millions of Americans
smoke marijuana recreationally without it ruining their day to day
lives.
The same holds true for several other drugs. Among others,
Sullum quotes a CEO with a cocaine habit, as well as the housewife
that likes to shoot heroin before she cleans the house
(anonymously, of course). What's more, Sullum argues, the CEO and
cleaning lady are part of a non-trivial part of the population (as
high as 7 percent) who use illegal drugs on a regular basis, and
still manage to function more or less normally.
As shocking as parts of this book may be, it's worth noting that
Sullum is a moderate on the subject of drugs. He rejected the much
more sexy title Just Say Yes because that was not the
message that he wanted to convey. Saying Yes very
thoroughly details both the positive and negative effects of a
whole laundry list of drugs, legal and non-legal, giving readers an
opportunity to judge for themselves whether these drugs really are
as diabolical as they are often portrayed in the popular press.
Some people are unhappy with this approach, and not only family
values defenders. Writing earlier this year in the New York
Press, Mark Ames, who admitted to typing while
on speed, was driven a little bit nuts by Sullum's "clear,
rational, calm style." Ames lashed out against Sullum's willingness
to engage Christians (by arguing that the Bible is hardly the
teetotalers handbook) and the fact that he doesn't wholeheartedly
endorse the drug-addled nihilism that Ames clearly prefers.
"By the time [Sullum] reaches his grand conclusion, in a chapter
titled 'Managing Moderation,' you just want to punch him, tell him
to get the f--- away because he's bumming your high," wrote Ames in
a spasm of self righteous pique.
Mitch Horowitz, Sullum's editor from Tarcher/Penguin, had a
devastating reply in the letters page of the next issue of
the Press. "Mark Ames' review…" he wrote, "only
succeeds in challenging one point of Sullum's book…and by
accident: that drug use doesn't impair performance."
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