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The Drug War : An Oxymoron

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The Drug War: An Oxymoron
What if I told you that a crusade against narcotics has resulted in an overdose epidemic? This has been exactly what the United States Drug War has done. The War on Drugs is considered to have started in 1914 with the ban on opium and cocaine. Prohibition of alcohol in the 1920s is considered to be an important chapter of the War on Drugs. But it was not until June 1971 that President Nixon officially declared a "war on drugs." He enforced this by drastically expanding federal drug control agencies and mandatory minimum sentencing for those arrested for drug crimes. Defenders of the drug war assert that zealous enforcement is the correct way of dealing with America's drug dilemma. However, it has only accomplished increasing the prison population by putting nonviolent offenders behind bars. It has also done nothing to lessen the overdose crisis. This catastrophic, failing war has to meet its end, as it is having many tragic effects such as the production of stronger, deadlier drugs, increased drug use, and has been wildly ineffectual throughout history.
To begin, the drug war has led to the production and wide accessibility of much stronger and deadlier drugs. This has been observed throughout the past century with every wave of prohibition. For example, Johann Hari, journalist for the LA Times, explains that before Prohibition in the 1920s, beer and wine were the most popular form of alcohol, the same being true after Prohibition ended. During that

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