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Thursday, February 12, 2009

Michael Goldfarb in Defense of Idiocy

Yesterday, I noted some particularly stupid statements by an unnamed senior U.S. official:
U.S. law-enforcement officials -- as well as some of their counterparts in Mexico -- say the explosion in violence indicates progress in the war on drugs as organizations under pressure are clashing.

"If the drug effort were failing there would be no violence," a senior U.S. official said Wednesday. There is violence "because these guys are flailing. We're taking these guys out. The worst thing you could do is stop now."

I wasn't the only to notice (actually, quite a few places commented).

Enter Michael Goldfarb at the Weekly Standard to the rescue of the unnamed U.S. official:

This is one of the paradoxes of the war on drugs that leads to ridicule from opponents of the policy. I spent my first year out of school writing memos for police chiefs on topics ranging from devising better systems for monitoring domestic violence to developing protocols for chemical attacks. One of the projects I worked on involved developing new metrics for monitoring the progress of the HIDTA (High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area) program. The problem was just as described above. These cops would go in and target the upper echelon of a distribution network. When they achieved their mission, rates of violent crime would spike in their area of operations. The reason: once you take out the big fish, the small fish start killing each other as they battle for control of all those newly underserved customers.

The cops wanted a new metric by which to judge their success -- one that would not penalize them for an increased murder rate that necessarily follows from doing their job, i.e. eliminating a major drug trafficker.

The flaws in Goldfarb's argument are obvious -- he's confusing success in an action with success in policy.

When those cops he worked with busted the big fish, and the little fish fought over the territory and customers (which were still there), Goldfarb doesn't say what most likely happened next: One of the little fish won and became the new big fish; distribution continued as before; and they were back to square one (except for all the violence and people dying).

If you're trying to measure whether the cops were successful in busting big fish, then the answer was "Yes." If you're trying to measure whether the drug war was successful, the the answer was a resounding "No."

This is a common problem with drug warriors who can't tell the difference between action and policy. You see it all the time. There's a five ton seizure of drugs (a successful action) and they say that's proof that the drug war is working. In fact, it's usually a sign that the traffickers have so much drugs moving that even a five ton seizure doesn't affect the availability of drugs at all (an unsuccessful policy).

Sure, it's not the cops' fault. They're told to execute an action. It's the over-riding policy that's fatally flawed, which makes the cops' successful actions meaningless at best, and usually disastrous.

Of course, Goldfarb's defense of the idiot in the WSJ story was particularly ridiculous, since that official was actually claiming that the violence was proof of "progress in the war on drugs."

And that's just false. Every time we escalate the war on drugs, more people die, but the economics of the black market drug trade dictate that the war on drugs must fail. So yes, with any luck, the violence will subside in Mexico if and when a new equilibrium is created... that is, until the next unnamed moronic U.S. official, cheered on by Michael Goldfarb, thinks that the drug war can be won by increasing violence.

11:36:13 PM |  | Related  | permalink | comment []



Your weekend reading assignment

Vices Are Not Crimes: A Vindication of Moral Liberty by Lysander Spooner, 1875

I dare you to read the whole thing.

The next time someone says "Well, if you want to legalize drugs, why don't you just legalize murder while you're at it?", I want to strap them down and force them to read this...

... but their reading comprehension would probably fail catastrophically, and then I'd be stuck with a vegetable strapped to a chair.



8:07:53 PM |  | Related  | permalink | comment []


Five Years in Amsterdam

I'm going to be busy the next few days with a special out-of-town guest. Brendan Hunt, one of my former students from the early 90's, has done quite well in the improv comedy field, including five years as part of the outstanding Boom Chicago troupe in Amsterdam.

Brendan created a one-man show about that time, appropriately titled "Five Years in Amsterdam" which performed at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival and six cities around the world, including the HBO Comedy Arts Festival in Aspen 2007. He's coming back to Illinois State University this weekend and will be performing the show this Saturday night at 7 pm in the Bone Student Center Old Main Room. Free!

Occasionally smart. Often upsetting. Always funny. This breakthrough hit of HBO's US Comedy Festival autobiographically offers sex, drugs and rock and roll, with a side order of deep, lasting inner peace; oh and soccer too.

Brendan was the co-founder of Theatre of Ted, an open-mic-anything-goes student performance venue at Illinois State (and I've been the group's faculty advisor for 18 years). Ted is bringing Brendan back and underwriting this special event.

I can't wait to see the show myself. If you're in the area, check it out.

8:47:04 AM |  | Related  | permalink | comment []






There's a war going on. It destroys lives and families, spawns violence, suspends civil liberties, tramples on the infirm, locks up millions of peaceful citizens, costs billions, and subjugates reason with fear. This blog looks at the front lines of the drug war, with news, analysis, and the occasional rant.

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