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BOOK REVIEW "Drug Warriors and Their Prey - From Police
Power to
Police State"
Drug Warriors and Their Prey
From Police Power to Police State
Richard Lawrence Miller
Praeger Publishers 1996, ISBN 0-275-95042-5
A Review by Peter Webstersee diagram
HERE
There is a certain difficulty in writing a review of Richard Lawrence
Miller's Drug Warriors and Their Prey, but not because it is a difficult
book in any usual sense. On the contrary, it is disarmingly easy to
understand the author's every implication. Yet the theme of Mr. Miller's
essay, a point by point comparison of the reality of Drug Prohibition in the
United States today with exactly analogous situations leading up to Hitler's
Third Reich and the attempted destruction of the Jewish people, is certain
to repulse the very readers who need most to understand that, indeed, it can
happen again. Thus the book, and any honest review of it, might achieve
little more than preaching to the converted: those who can readily accept
its main thesis must already be active in resisting not just the "worst
excesses" of the War on Drugs, but the entire and historically-proven
futility of the very concept of Prohibition as a means to advantageous ends.
Not that Hitler and the Reich's atrocities are too distasteful for public
examination and discourse, far from it! Americans, and to a lesser degree,
Europeans, continue to watch with relish and fascination each new television
episode depicting Hitler and his cohorts, continue to make best-sellers of
both fiction and non-fiction tomes about the Reich, and we see many
educators and intellectuals insisting that the morbid details of Hitlerism
be widely taught in the schools so that we may "never again" fall into the
trap which ensnared the post World-War-One German nation. Equally atrocious
episodes as the Nazi reign (at least with respect to relative population
size), which have more recently occurred in Vietnam and Cambodia, or in East
Timor, Rwanda, Yugoslavia, to mention but a few, are given short shrift by
producers of documentaries and consumers of such "entertainment," and
ignored in classrooms as potential "never again" object lessons. Even more
glaringly, America continues to largely ignore the implications of an even
more successful genocide which American Policy, assisted by American
Congresses and Politicians of the highest stature, committed over a period
far longer than the Reich's brief existence: the eradication of Native
American populations. A recent book which rightly dared to call that
eradication a holocaust, was indignantly denounced by many "intellectuals."
Hitler and his image have clearly become a modern scapegoat through which we
attempt to psychologically expunge collective guilt for our own atrocities,
past and present, as well as for those other atrocities which we do nothing,
or very little, to prevent or stop. There is plenty of evil-reeking film
footage of Hitler's life and times which when watched, with their pompous
and cymbal-crashing military tunes, and their images of "the bad guys" far
surpassing anything that Hollywood can invent, become the perfect medium for
our unfortunate proclivity to hate. And to do so collectively in a way which
seems correct and proper. The evil image of Hitler and his deeds provides
catharsis for the sins we care not to recognize, dare not recognize, and
allows a continuation of a status quo which is fertile ground for allowing
hate to produce once again the very situation from which inevitably rise the
most glaringly evil aspects of our modern world.
If we can see from these observations why many a reader will close his mind
to Mr. Miller's thesis, or perhaps merely look at the dust jacket and
replace Drug Warriors on its bookstore shelf, it is nevertheless quite
necessary and effective to compare the American-led War on Drugs with events
in 1930's Germany. As Mr. Miller readily shows, it is not with the
after-the-fact evil image of "The Great Dictator" that current parallels
correspond, but rather with the actions of individual and ordinary Germans,
their daily life, the ease with which they fell into that horrible trap, and
the actions of police, mayors, governors and administrators, the deeds and
"researches" of doctors and scientists, the judgments of the courts, the
facile way in which the Jewish people were ensnared in "The Chain of
Destruction : Identification, Ostracism, Confiscation, Concentration, and
Annihilation." Before 1939, when it became painfully obvious to every person
on earth what the Führer was up to, it was equally as difficult as now to
see the inevitable course of events which follows from the first principles
of fascism. Many in the United States and England praised Hitler's National
Socialism for having brought Germany out of the Great Depression, Presidents
and Prime Ministers believed his Treaties and Promises, even subscribed to
his overall political vision, until it was far too late for anything but
total conflict.
If the very accurate and chilling comparisons of developments in 1930's
Germany to the modern War on Drugs disgusts some readers to the point where
they are blinded to the reality exposed in Drug Warriors, that in itself is
a telling parallel to that decade before the beginning of WWII. Euphemisms
and pacification would today certainly go no further in helping to reverse
ill-conceived Drug Prohibition than they did in reversing the Reich's rise
to power. Books and articles by those who predicted the inevitable course
that post WWI fascism would take were, as will be Mr. Miller's book today,
viewed as unnecessarily alarmist, the product of an over-vivid imagination
or even fanaticism. But in the telling of such truth, as in the
recommendation of possible means of avoidance of great disaster, there
really is no alternative but the kind of stark simplicity of theme which
Drug Warriors epitomizes. For the few persons on the brink of waking up to
the reality of the Drug War, the book will certainly provide better
catalysis than other current, and less honest if more complacent tracts. For
those masses eternally convinced that "it can't happen here," there is,
history would teach, little that can convince.
The chapters in Drug Warriors are named for the stages of "The Chain of
Destruction" mentioned above, which, as Mr. Miller points out, derives from
Raul Hilberg's monumental study of the destruction process as applied to the
holocaust. From the very first page of chapter 1, "Identification," we see
in vivid detail how the modern drug-user is fulfilling the same function as
did the Jew during National Socialism. He is the perfect scapegoat, the
perfect distraction, the ideal "other" and alien, the perfect tool "for
maintaining the social turmoil needed by authoritarians" in their rise to
power. Miller quotes Karl A. Schleunes, The Twisted Road to Auschwitz:
It was the Jews who helped hold Hitler's system together-on the practical as
well as the ideological level. The Jew allowed Hitler to ignore the long
list of economic and social promises he had made to the SA, the lower party
apparatus, and the lower middle classes. By steering the attention of these
groups away from their more genuine grievances and toward the Jew, Hitler
succeeded in blunting the edge of their revolutionary wrath, leaving him
freer to pursue his own nonideological goals of power in cooperation with
groups whose influence he had once promised to weaken or even destroy. An
ideological retreat on the Jewish issue in these circumstances was
impossible.... The continued search for a solution to the Jewish problem
allowed Hitler to maintain ideological contact with elements of his movement
for whom National Socialism had done very little.
Just as it was difficult for people in the US or England of the 1930's to
get worked up about a "few incidents" of the breaking of windows of Jewish
shops, or the "excesses" of burning the contents of a library or two, it is
today difficult perhaps to get worked up over some of the documented
"excesses" of the Drug War, hundreds of which are described and referenced
in Drug Warriors. "A few" such incidents can always be blamed on individual
human error and frailty, as when an over-zealous cop assassinates a
purported marijuana dealer. But what of the evidence so well presented in
Drug Warriors of actual drug warrior "death squads" instituted by US
government agencies to "assassinate narcotics leaders?" What are we to make
of the statement of former Los Angeles Police Chief Daryl Gates (also the
founder and designer of the DARE program, "Drug Abuse Resistance
Education"): In 1990 he advised the U.S. Senate about the "'casual user' and
what you do with the whole group. The casual user ought to be taken out and
shot, because he or she has no reason for using drugs." Gates later
emphasized that he was not being facetious and declared marijuana users to
be guilty of treason. Such sentiment in the US today is not unusual. William
Bennett, the former "Drug Czar" and therefore top drug police officer
declared that ethically no trial is required before killing citizens
suspected of drug dealing. The next day Bennett said of drug dealers, "You
deserve to die." (These passages quoted or paraphrased from Drug Warriors,
where they are referenced.) Comparisons to the Gestapo are unavoidable.
Miller goes to great lengths to make it painfully obvious that we are not
dealing with a few minor incidents provoked by the occasional renegade, but
as in 1930's Germany, a vast and vicious machine is being oiled and tested,
a horribly familiar pattern is again materializing, and normal law-abiding
citizens are today just as unaware of what lies just around the corner as
they were formerly. More critically, just as leaders and intellectuals of
the 1930's were equally as duped and pacified into non-action, even to
supporting the rise of the Nazi machine, a significant movement of leaders
and intellectuals resisting the American lead in the War on Drugs, a
coalition of nations, for example, which might quickly put an end to the
rising power of Drug War Fascism, is nowhere on the horizon, it would seem.
Such a project would need to be a widely visible, intentional and public
denunciation of American policy accompanied by a radical shift in
Prohibition policy itself within those nations.
As much as it may itself seem a fanaticism to compare Drug Warriorism with
Nazism, I have tried to show here why that is far more an artifact of our
psychological makeup than a misinterpretation or gross exaggeration of the
factual evidence at hand. On every page of Drug Warriors the facts are
profuse. We ignore them, and their proper interpretation, at great peril:
I believe authoritarians are manufacturing and manipulating public fears
about drug use in order to create a police state where a much broader agenda
of social control can be implemented, using government power to determine
what movies we may watch, determine who we may love and how we may love
them, determine whether we may or must pray to a deity. I believe the war on
drug users masks a war on democracy.
After all, what is the vision of a Drug-Free America? Millions in prison or
slave labor, and only enthusiastic supporters of government policy allowed
to hold jobs, attend school, have children, drive cars, own property. This
is the combined vision of utopia held forth by Nancy Reagan, Ronald Reagan,
George Bush, William Bennett, Daryl Gates, and thousands of other drug
warriors. News media and "public interest" advertising tell us this is the
America for which all good citizens yearn.
—Richard Lawrence Miller
I shall end my own intellectually risky yet morally necessary task of
agreeing wholeheartedly with Miller's analysis and prognosis by quoting the
same passage with which Drug Warriors begins,
Everywhere in the world I dread that same self-deception which holds that
"it can't happen here." It can happen anywhere. It becomes unlikely only
where the mass of the population is aware of the threat, where there is
accordingly no relapse into lethargy, where the character of
"totalitarianism" is known and recognized from its very inception and in
each of its aspects-as a Proteus which is constantly putting on new masks,
which glides out of your grasp like an eel, which does the opposite of what
it claims, which perverts the meaning of its words, which speaks, not to
impart information, but to hypnotize, divert attention, insinuate,
intimidate, dupe, which exploits and produces every type of fear, which
promises security while destroying it completely.
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