Chicago Sun-Times

Trump’s ‘ tough’ drug policies aren’t smart

- BY JACOB SULLUM Jacob Sullum is a senior editor at the libertaria­n magazine Reason. Creators Syndicate

During a visit to New Hampshire on Monday, Donald Trump gave a 19- minute speech about opioid abuse in which he used the word “tough” or variations of it 19 times, more than four times as often as he used the word “smart.”

That ratio seems about right, given the details of the president’s plan to end “this scourge of drug addiction in America” and “raise a drug- free generation of American children.”

Trump’s plan is heavy on tactics that have already failed. For instance, he favors “spending a lot of money” on “very, very bad commercial­s” that will “scare” kids away from drugs by depicting “pretty unsavory situations.”

Trump does not seem to realize that the federal government already tried that, and the results were disappoint­ing. Evaluation­s found that the taxpayer- financed propaganda did not make teenagers less likely to try drugs and may even have had the opposite effect.

Trump’s supply- side ideas are equally innovative. “We have got to get tough,” he said, and toughness requires “the death penalty for the really bad pushers and abusers.”

The president’s fixation on killing drug dealers is little more than a bloodthirs­ty fantasy. Congress approved execution of large- scale drug trafficker­s back in 1994, but the provision has never been carried out and probably never will, since the Supreme Court has said the Eighth Amendment requires that the death penalty be reserved for “crimes that take the life of the victim.”

Trump also wants to reduce the weight thresholds for mandatory minimum sentences in opioid cases, which is more constituti­onally feasible than copying Iran’s drug penalties but no more likely to affect the drug supply. As every tough drug warrior who has preceded Trump during the last century has discovered, the economic incentives created by prohibitio­n mean there are always more dealers to replace the ones behind bars.

Those same incentives spell doom for Trump’s plan to “keep the damn drugs out” by building a “big, beautiful wall” along the border with Mexico. Drug smugglers attracted by prohibitio­n profits will always find ways around, over, under or through any wall, no matter how big or beautiful.

Trump bragged that U. S. Customs and Border Protection “seized nearly 1,500 pounds of fentanyl last year, nearly three times the amount seized in 2016.” Since CBP will never manage to intercept more than a small percentage of incoming drugs, rising seizures are a sign of failure, not success, especially when they are accompanie­d by falling retail prices.

The government has more control over the supply of legally produced opioids, which are subject to quotas set by the Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion and regulation of the doctors who prescribe them. “We’re going to cut nationwide opioid prescripti­ons by one- third over the next three years,” Trump said.

That strategy does not seem very promising, given that opioid- related deaths mainly involve heroin and illegally produced fentanyl. According to the U. S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the number of opioid prescripti­ons fell by 16 percent from 2012 to 2016, while the number of opioid- related deaths rose by 82 percent.

Restrictin­g the supply of pain pills contribute­s to that death toll by driving nonmedical users into the black market, where the drugs are more dangerous because purity and potency are unpredicta­ble. The pressure to reduce prescripti­ons also hurts legitimate pain patients, who are left in agony when their doctors arbitraril­y decrease their doses or cut them off entirely.

The Trump administra­tion reportedly wants to impose the CDC’s opioid prescribin­g guidelines, which encourage doctors to be as stingy as possible with pain pills, on patients covered by Medicaid or Medicare. That will mean more unnecessar­y suffering for innocent people deprived of the medication they need to have a decent quality of life.

Attorney General Jeff Sessions thinks victims of the crackdown on pain pills should “take some aspirin” and “tough it out.” Like his boss, he does not seem to realize there are some problems toughness cannot solve.

 ??  ?? President Donald Trump speaks in Manchester, New Hampshire, about his plan to combat opioid addiction.
| GETTY IMAGES
President Donald Trump speaks in Manchester, New Hampshire, about his plan to combat opioid addiction. | GETTY IMAGES

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