Michael W. Lynch from the March 2001 issue
Subj: The general's will
Date: 12/19/2000
From: mwlynch@reason.com
Spent a morning last Tuesday at the Heritage Foundation, listening to the outgoing drug czar, Gen. Barry R. McCaffrey. Heritage billed the speech as, "Is Our Balanced Approach to the War on Drugs Working?" McCaffrey, who prefers assertions to questions, made the title declarative: "Our Balanced Strategy Against Drugs Is Working."
Let me admit a bias of my own: Long before I spent time in Santa Fe talking with New Mexico Gov. Gary Johnson about how much fun, if arguably counterproductive, it is to get stoned, I felt the drug war's insistence on jailing people for sensory enhancement is a waste of human effort (see "America's Most Dangerous Politician," January). Still, I was surprised to find just what an idiot McCaffrey is in person.
Like drug dealers, McCaffrey targets America's youth. "The whole notion of prevention and education, aimed at getting American adolescents from the 6th grade through 12th grade, where they are reduced exposure to gateway drug taking behavior," he said in a moment of what passes for clarity. "That's the heart and soul of our national drug taking strategy."
As you can see, McCaffrey expresses his concern for youth via a strange bureaucratic speech pattern that exhibits a Bushian inability to form coherent sentences. Hence, 8th graders end up "encountering drugs in our society" and getting "wrapped up and end up in a statistically enhanced probability of being engaged in compulsive drug taking activities as young adults." Still, some of what he said reassured me. "You are statistically not going to get to age 30 and develop a cocaine habit, or start experimenting with heroin," said McCaffrey, which means I'm out of the most dangerous neck of the woods.
More worrisome was his larger world view, a perspective that is neither unique to McCaffrey nor likely to change with the new administration. The general's favorite refrain is "We're moving in the right direction," which I think he really believes. We're moving in that direction because after years of increases, drug consumption by youths appears to have leveled off. More important, to achieve this we are increasingly giving the state tremendous powers and resources. "We have billions of dollars flowing into these programs," McCaffrey said, adding without irony: "Some of them kind of creative."
It's not just insipid social programs that "vector you back to your community anti-drug coalition" that McCaffrey wants. When he became drug czar, the United States employed only 3,000 people as border guards. Today, he says we're up to 7,000. He thinks 20,000 would be a good number. He likes the increase in prisoners, too. "The Drug Enforcement Administration, backed by the CIA, the FBI, and the armed forces, are working vertical integrated crime organizations pretty effectively. That's why our federal prison population has gone up substantially, 120,000 people behind bars, two-thirds there for drug-related offenses, and there's room for more," said McCaffrey, emphasizing room for more.
"This isn't a problem to solve; it's a system to put in place," he explained. And what a system it is: On top of tens of thousands of border guards, hundreds of thousands of prisoners, and countless international anti-drug military excursions, children are propagandized in school on the dangers -- some real, some make-believe -- of drugs, prisoners are released under supervision for one to five years of regular drug testing, and insurance companies are forced to pay for extensive mental health and drug treatment services.
The system offers one more thing: a safe haven for politicians who, like other members of the power class, are likely to use drugs in their youth without fear of going to jail like common citizens. Asked about Bush's alleged and Clinton and Gore's acknowledged drug use, McCaffrey responded, "We went through an irresponsible period in the 1970s and 1980s, and lots of Americans used marijuana in particular, and that includes some of our leading public figures. I want to stop asking them whether they smoked a joint in 1972. Unless they've got a medical, social, or legal problem, which they should share with us, I want to get the conversation on what do you think, Mr. or Ms. Politician, ought to be our policy -- and do you commit yourself by your example to supporting that policy?"
In other words, as long as politicians promise not to question whether drug use is a medical or social problem and pledge to keep it a legal problem, they're home free. Too bad that's not an offer available to the rest of us.
Subj: Tax cut time?
Date: 1/4/01
From: mwlynch@reason.com
The coming Bush-Cheney regime is dominating D.C. in every possible way, from the city's policy agenda to its fashion sense to its annoying slang. Newt Gingrich's annoying verbal tic "frankly" (a reliable sign that one was about to be lied to) has been replaced with Dick Cheney's "Big Time."
This is one conclusion I came to during a briefing sponsored by the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities at the National Press Club. The CBPP is an impressive left-of-center think tank whose mission is to construct sound arguments on why every policy put forward by a Republican is impractical, unworkable, and dangerous.
With a Bush administration on tap, the CBPP is emphasizing the fleeting nature of the surplus, so as to head off any tax cuts. Hence the title of the featured paper, written by CBPP Executive Director Robert Greenstein: "Can The New Surplus Projections Accommodate a Large Tax Cut?" Any guesses on the answer? In support of his No in thunder, Greenstein brought along William Gale, an economist at the Brookings Institution, and Robert L. Bixby, the executive director of the Concord Coalition, a green-eyeshade group that's useful when new spending programs are on the table but worse than worthless when tax cuts are imminent.
And they are imminent. Bush has shocked Washington by giving every indication that he plans to actually put forward the platform on which he campaigned. You may recall, however vaguely, that a broad-based, $1.3 trillion, 10-year tax cut was central to Bush's agenda. Liberals are at pains to make the case that America just can't afford this or any meaningful tax cut. With projected surpluses of at least $3 trillion, that's a tough, but not impossible, case. They must simply discredit the 10-year surplus estimates, which are of course wild guesses at best.
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