Oregon's Drug Problems Were Not Caused by Decriminalization
Prohibition is at the root of the hazards that have led to record numbers of opioid-related deaths.

Three years ago, 58 percent of Oregon voters approved Measure 110, a groundbreaking ballot initiative that eliminated criminal penalties for low-level possession of illegal drugs. Last week, a group called the Coalition to Fix and Improve Ballot Measure 110 proposed two versions of an initiative aimed at reversing that reform, and recent polling suggests most Oregonians are open to the idea.
There are two main reasons for that reversal of public opinion, neither of which goes to the heart of the moral and practical case for decriminalization. Oregonians are understandably troubled by the nuisances associated with public drug use, and they are dismayed that, despite Measure 110's promise of more funding for treatment, opioid-related deaths have continued to increase.
The main idea behind Measure 110 was that consuming politically disfavored intoxicants should not be treated as a crime. Since drug use itself violates no one's rights, it is hard to argue with that premise.
Eliminating criminal penalties for drug possession, however, does not require tolerating conduct that offends, incommodes, or alarms people who have an equal right to use sidewalks, parks, and other taxpayer-funded facilities. That problem—which many major cities face, regardless of whether they routinely arrest people for drug possession—is distinct from drug use per se, just as disorderly alcohol-related conduct is distinct from drinking per se.
The alcohol comparison is instructive in another way. Even during Prohibition, which banned the production and distribution of "intoxicating liquors," drinking was not a crime. The situation created by Measure 110 is analogous, with all the dangers that criminalizing the drug supply entails.
Just as alcohol prohibition exposed drinkers to the potentially deadly hazards of bootleg booze, drug prohibition forces users to rely on black-market products of uncertain provenance and composition. Measure 110 did nothing to address that problem, which has led to record numbers of drug-related deaths across the country.
That trend was fostered by the proliferation of illicit fentanyl, a result of the economic incentives that prohibition creates, and by the government's crackdown on pain medication, which drove nonmedical users toward substitutes that are much more dangerous because their potency is highly variable and unpredictable. It is therefore not surprising that opioid-related deaths kept rising after decriminalization in Oregon, which saw increases similar to those recorded in California and Washington, neighboring states where low-level possession remains a crime.
Advocates of recriminalization argue that the threat of jail encourages drug users to enter treatment. But there are reasons to doubt that forcing "help" on people who do not want it is an effective way of resolving the social and psychological issues underlying life-disrupting drug habits.
According to a 2016 systematic review, "evidence does not, on the whole, suggest improved outcomes related to compulsory treatment approaches, with some studies suggesting potential harms." The authors conclude that "given the potential for human rights abuses within compulsory treatment settings, non-compulsory treatment modalities should be prioritized by policymakers seeking to reduce drug-related harms."
One danger of jailing noncompliant drug users is that incarceration raises the risk of a fatal overdose because forced abstinence reduces tolerance. According to a 2023 study, that risk is "markedly elevated" among people recently freed from prison, especially during the first two weeks after release.
Washington County District Attorney Kevin Barton, who supports the recriminalization of drug use in Oregon, says he favors "mandatory diversion just like we have for drunk driving." But drunk drivers have committed a crime that endangers other people, while Barton thinks drug users should be forced into treatment even when they have done nothing other than consume psychoactive substances that legislators have decided to ban.
Heavy drinkers are free to ruin their health and their lives as long as they do not injure or endanger others, and that was true even during Prohibition. But under the policy that Barton favors, all illegal drug users are equally subject to criminal penalties. Measure 110 rightly repudiated that morally indefensible distinction.
© Copyright 2023 by Creators Syndicate Inc.
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Just because a hammer is legal doesn’t mean anyone who buys a hammer is legally justified to run around with it swinging it at everyone and bashing windshields.
I think that’s the point the author is trying to make. Abusing a tool doesn’t equivocate to owning a tool. The abuse should be illegal not the tool itself.
It seems to be a common narrative to ban everything with statistical numbers which largely dismisses the difference between abusive-use and responsible-use.
And it just goes to simple laziness and unwillingness. Much easier to say yes or no than to work in the gray.
"There is no downside to recreational drug use."
to
"There are downisides to recreational drug use, but alcohol is an acceptable recreational drug so anything should be acceptable."
...and as history has shown repeatedly the prohibition effort is far worse than the actual downside itself. The abuse that affects others being illegal works far better than the wildly fat-paintbrush of prohibition.
The chief downside to "recreational drug use" is that we tolerate rather than banish the drug addled. Deaths from fentanyl laced voluntary use of heroin or "pills" is just another example of failing the Darwin test.
“There is no downside to recreational drug use” said no one serious. Of course there are downsides. There are downsides to breathing. What people actually said was that the downsides of prohibition were far, far worse.
If you're going to argue for a return to prohibition, at least do so honestly instead of building your case on strawmen.
Fuck off you dishonest cunt. You know full well that if they went after those people for their remaining crimes you and the rest of the leftist activists would attack LE for "persecuting a harmless marginalized community" or some other BS.
I might be a heartless bastard, but what's the problem with people killing themselves with chemicals? Is there any libertarian justification for assuming control of someone to prevent self-destructive behavior?
I'm in favor of allowing all drugs to be sold on the free market. I'm also opposed to all taxpayer funded treatment programs.
Do what you want as an adult, but don't expect the taxpayers to subsidize your life-choices or to save you from the consequences of your bad decisions (and don't expect sympathy from the legal system if you violate other people's rights while in the process of demonstrating that you make bad decisions).
Aside from a propensity to become destructive to others before they manage to destroy themselves?
If they cause harm to others, we have laws covering that sort of thing. If we're no longer arresting people for simply possessing drugs, then the court systems and prison systems should have plenty of resources freed up to properly deal with those who violate the rights of others (footnote 1).
If you want to start a private charity to pay for other people's treatment programs, feel free.
(Footnote: Unless we come to learn that cops rarely, if ever, arrest somebody solely for marijuana possession, and that "busted for having a joint" arrests were mostly done because cops are lazy and it was the easiest charge to investigate ("Did he have a joint?"), or the conviction was obtained due to a Plea Bargain because the D.A. wanted a conviction without having to actually work for it, and the Defendant didn't want to risk a conviction on a more serious charge, even if that charge would have been more difficult to prove.)
Yes, we have some laws that are enforced in the breach. But the destruction of once vibrant neighborhoods because of rampant drug us is something that most cities are unwilling to manage. What the libertarian viewpoint misses is that some drugs create antisocial behavior that is in and of itself destructive.
I would agree if part of the program would include the death penalty for dealers who sold to minors. Let adults consume what they want, but I would leave them on the street with no welfare or other form of "social safety net", understanding that the rest of us would have to be prepared to defend ourselves and our stuff from their depredations.
I don't know why you have to steadfastly deny a potential causal link between decriminalization and an increase in deaths and damages, if you still feel the policy is right.
To me, anyway, it makes sense that young people might see the destigmatization and removal of penalties as a blanket permission slip, and go a lot harder on illicit substances than they otherwise would have. In the short term, it has the possibility of creating a wave of first-time users or people who are much less concerned with being discreet.
But we advocate this position because 1) It probably results in better long-term outcomes compared to the drug war, and 2) Even if it doesn't, we don't believe it's a power of government to make laws about what individuals are allowed to do to themselves.
Oregon resident here. First of all, Portland is by far the most populous city in the state- so what happens there is what makes it to the media. The Rose City has a notoriously poorly-managed government though, and I think their policies are partially at fault for the “broken parts” of Measure 110. As this article correctly points out, public drug use that interferes with others’ rights- like use of sidewalks- is the issue. I don’t care if somebody uses drugs in their home, but don’t stand in the middle of the street naked, shouting profanities at everyone- that’s not OK. Portland's police bureau and city attorney often won't even arrest or prosecute shoplifters, so they’re not about to stop someone from shooting up in front of your child or getting so high that they start smashing car windows indiscriminately. I think Measure 110 went too far by allowing open drug use- but the bigger issue isn’t the use itself, it’s what people do when they are high- which may already be illegal, but those laws aren’t enforced.
100% correct. In WA, try evicting one when they turn your property into a gathering place for addicts. They get endless protections and the landlords have few rights. Then there’s all the homeless amd near homeless addicts we have in Spokane’s downtown area. They get more protection than healthy law abiding people trying to mind their own business. And now it’s spreading further outside the metropolitan area every year.
And all of it can be traced to bad governance by leftists.
Yeah, and that's the problem. That they are enabling and protecting drug users who are very anti-social in their behaviors.
Legalization is the right policy because it is absolutely immoral to use violence against a person for using or possessing drugs, not because the poor junkies are victims and need protection. People who choose to use drugs should face all the consequences of their choices and actions.
Written by someone who has more ideology than experience.
Decriminalization absolutely increased drug-related crime.
The homeless encampments exist solely as refuges where illegal drug users and untreated mentally ill can "do their thing" and still be parasites on the community. Has nothing to do with housing prices.
What is often forgotten is that everyone needs to be productive in a capitalist society. Illegal drug users and untreated mentally ill are not productive.
What is often forgotten is that everyone needs to be productive in a capitalist society. Illegal drug users and untreated mentally ill are not productive.
All due respect, you have this exactly backwards. In a REAL capitalist society, no one needs to be productive, because by definition of the society’s structure, you wouldn’t be a burden to anyone. Die on the street from an overdose, your body is quietly chucked onto a corpse truck and dumped in an incinerator.
But as our society has become increasingly sociliast-TIC, the failure of one to be productive then becomes a burden to the productive. As increasing numbers of people fall out of the ‘productive class’, they become a burden to an increasing number of the slowly shrinking productive class. Again, in a much more capitalistic society, open(er) borders aren’t so much of a problem. But as you have a decreasingly capitalist-IC society, porous borders start to become a problem.
Decriminalization didn't enable that. Failing to enforce all the other (legitimate) laws did. There is nothing inherent in drug legalization or decriminalization that says you have to tolerate a bunch of junkies on the streets committing actual crimes against people and property.