Alternatives to the "War on Drugs"
Statement of Conscience
Scope: Continental
Unitarian Universalist Association of Congregations
as passed by majority vote General Assembly in Québec City, Saturday Plenary
June 22, 2002
Printable Version in PDF Format
Background: This final draft Statement of Conscience of the
Unitarian Universalist Association builds upon four social witness statements
on drug policy adopted by the Unitarian Universalist Association between 1965
and 1991. In June 2000, the General Assembly of the UUA selected "Alternatives
to the 'War on Drugs'" as the Study/Action Issue (SAI) suggested to congregations
for two years of study, action, and reflection. The Commission on Social Witness
(CSW) received initial reports from congregations and districts in March 2001.
In June 2001, the CSW held a workshop on this issue at General Assembly. An initial
draft Statement of Conscience was distributed to all congregations and districts
for their reflection and feedback. At its March 2002 meeting, the CSW prepared
a revised draft. It was placed on the final agenda of the June 2002 General Assembly.
A mini-assembly was held on Friday, June 21, where proposed amendments were received.
Friday evening, June 21, the CSW produced this final draft Statement of Conscience,
based on the mini-assembly and the proposed amendments. The delegates present
at the Saturday June 22 plenary adopted this Statement of Conscience with the
required two-thirds majority.
Our Call to End the "War on Drugs"as a Matter of Conscience
For more than 30 years, American public policy has advanced an escalating "war
on drugs" that seeks to eradicate illegal drugs from our society. It is increasingly
clear that this effort has failed. Our current drug policy has consumed tens of
billions of dollars and wrecked countless lives. The costs of this policy include
the increasing breakdown of families and neighborhoods, endangerment of children,
widespread violation of civil liberties, escalating rates of incarceration, political
corruption, and the imposition of United States policy abroad. For United States
taxpayers, the price tag on the drug offensive has soared from $66 million in
1968 to almost $20 billion in 2000, an increase of over 30,000 percent. In practice
the drug war disproportionately targets people of color and people who are poverty-stricken.
Coercive measures have not reduced drug use, but they have clogged our criminal
justice system with non-violent offenders. It is time to explore alternative approaches
and to end this costly war.
The war on drugs has blurred the distinction between drug use and drug abuse.
Drug use is erroneously perceived as behavior that is out of control and harmful
to others. Illegal drug use is thus portrayed as threatening to society. As a
result, drug policy has been closed to study, discussion, and consideration of
alternatives by legislative bodies. Yet many people who use both legal and illegal
drugs live productive, functional lives and do no harm to society.
As Unitarian Universalists committed to a free and responsible search for truth,
we must protest the misguided policies that shape current practice. We cannot
in good conscience remain quiet when it is becoming clear that we have been misled
for decades about illegal drugs. United States government drug policy-makers have
misled the world about the purported success of the war on drugs. They tell the
public that success is dependent upon even more laws restricting constitutional
protections and the allocation of billions of dollars for drug law enforcement.
They mislead the public about the extent of corruption and environmental degradation
in other countries that the American war on drugs has left in its wake.
As Unitarian Universalists committed to the inherent worth and dignity of every
person and to justice, equity, and compassion in human relations, we call for
thoughtful consideration and implementation of alternatives that regard the reduction
of harm as the appropriate standard by which to assess drug policies. We seek
a compassionate reduction of harm associated with drugs, both legal and illegal,
with special attention to the harm unleashed by policies established in the war
on drugs.
As Unitarian Universalists committed to respecting the interdependent web of
existence of which we are a part, we find irresponsible and morally wrong the
practices of scorching the earth and poisoning the soil and ground water in other
countries to stop the production of drugs that are illegal in the United States.
As a community of faith, Unitarian Universalists have both a moral imperative
and a personal responsibility to ask the difficult questions that so many within
our society are unable, unwilling, or too afraid to ask. In asking these questions
and in weighing our findings, we are compelled to consider a different approach
to national drug policy.
A Different Approach
To conceive and develop a more just and compassionate drug policy, it is necessary
to transform how we view drugs and particularly drug addiction. Drug use, drug
abuse, and drug addiction are distinct from one another. Using a drug does not
necessarily mean abusing the drug, much less addiction to it. Drug abuse issues
are essentially matters for medical attention. We do not believe that drug use
should be considered criminal behavior. Advocates for harsh drug policies with
severe penalties for drug use often cite violent crime as a direct result of drug
use. Drugs alone do not cause crime. Legal prohibition of drugs leads to inflated
street value, which in turn incites violent turf wars among distributors. The
whole pattern is reminiscent of the proliferation of organized crime at the time
of alcohol prohibition in the early twentieth century. That policy also failed.
We believe that the vision of a drug-free America is unrealistic. Many programs
for school children have misled participants and the public by teaching that all
illicit drugs are equally harmful in spite of current scientific research to the
contrary. "Just Say No" is not a viable policy. The consequences of
the current drug war are cruel and counterproductive. At issue here are the health
and well being of our families and our communities, our societal fabric and our
global community. Alternatives exist.
Alternative Goals
Based on this perspective, we believe appropriate and achievable goals for
reformed national drug policies include:
- To prevent consumption of drugs, including alcohol and nicotine, that are
harmful to health among children and adolescents;
- To reduce the likelihood that drug users will become drug abusers;
- To minimize the harmful effects of drug use, such as disease contracted from
the use of contaminated needles and overdosing as a result of unwittingly using
impure drugs;
- To increase the availability and affordability of quality drug treatment and
eliminate the stigma associated with accessing it;
- To significantly reduce violent and predatory drug-related crime;
- To minimize the harmful consequences of current drug policy, such as racial
profiling, property confiscation without conviction, and unnecessary incarceration;
and
- To reduce the harm to our earth now caused by the practice of destroying crops
intended for the production of drugs.
Alternative Policies
Instead of the current war on drugs, we offer the following policies for study,
debate, and implementation:
- Shift budget priorities from spending for pursuing, prosecuting, and imprisoning
drug-law offenders to spending for education, treatment, and research.
- Develop and implement age-appropriate drug education programs that are grounded
in research and fact and that promote dialogue without fear of censure or reprisal.
- Undertake research to assess the effects of currently illegal drugs. Ensure
that findings and conclusions are publicly accessible, serving as a basis for
responsible decision-making by individuals and in arenas of public policy and
practice.
- Research the sociological factors that contribute to the likelihood of drug
use becoming habitual, addictive, and destructive, such as poverty, poor mental
health, sexual or other physical abuse, and lack of education or medical treatment.
- Research and expand a range of management and on-demand treatment programs
for drug abuse and addiction. Examples include nutritional counseling, job training,
psychiatric evaluation and treatment, psychological counseling, parent training
and assistance, support groups, clean needle distribution and exchange, substitution
of safer drugs (e.g. methadone or marijuana), medically administered drug maintenance,
disease screening, and acupuncture and other alternative and complementary treatments.
Publish the results of studies of these programs.
- Require health insurance providers to cover in-patient and out-patient treatment
for substance abuse on the same basis as other chronic health conditions.
- Make all drugs legally available with a prescription by a licensed physician,
subject to professional oversight. End the practice of punishing an individual
for obtaining, possessing, or using an otherwise illegal substance to treat a
medical condition. End the threat to impose sanctions on physicians who treat
patients with opiates for alleviation of pain.
- Prohibit civil liberties violations and other intrusive law enforcement practices.
Violations of the right to privacy such as urine testing should be imposed only
upon employees in safety-sensitive occupations.
- Establish a legal, regulated, and taxed market for marijuana. Treat marijuana
as we treat alcohol.
- Modify civil forfeiture laws to require conviction before seizure of assets.
Prohibit the eviction of family, friends, and co-habitants or the loss of government
entitlements.
- Abolish mandatory minimum prison sentences for the use and distribution of
currently illicit drugs. Legislation should specify only maximum prison sentences.
- Remove criminal penalties for possession and use of currently illegal drugs,
with drug abusers subject to arrest and imprisonment only if they commit an actual
crime (e.g., assault, burglary, impaired driving, vandalism). End sentencing inequities
driven by racial profiling.
- Establish and make more accessible prison-based drug treatment, education,
job training, and transition programs designed for inmates.
- End the financing of anti-drug campaigns in Central and South America, campaigns
that include the widespread spraying of herbicides, contribute to the destruction
of rainforests, and are responsible for uprooting peoples from their homelands.
Our Call to Act as People of Faith
We must begin with ourselves. Our congregations can offer safe space for open
and honest discussion among congregants about the complex issues of drug use,
abuse, and addiction. Through acceptance of one another and encouragement of spiritual
growth, we should be able to acknowledge and address our own drug use without
fear of censure or reprisal.
We can recognize that drugs include not only currently illegal substances but
also alcohol, nicotine, caffeine, over-the-counter pain relievers, and prescription
drugs. We can learn to distinguish among use, abuse, and addiction. We can support
one another in recognizing drug-related problems and seeking help. We can seek
to understand those among us who use drugs for relief or escape. With compassion,
we can cultivate reflection and analysis of drug policy. In the safe space of
our own congregations, we can begin to prevent destructive relationships with
drugs. We can lend necessary support to individuals and families when a loved
one needs treatment for an addiction problem. We can encourage our congregations
to partner with and follow the lead of groups representing individuals whose lives
are most severely undermined by current drug policy-people of color and of low
income. We can learn from health care professionals what unique patterns of substance
abuse exist in our local areas. We can go beyond our walls and bring our perspective
to the interfaith community, other nonprofit organizations, and elected officials.
Our Unitarian Universalist history calls us to pursue a more just world. Our
faith compels us to hold our leaders accountable for their policies. In calling
for alternatives to the war on drugs, we are mindful of its victims. Drug use
should be addressed solely as a public health problem, not as a criminal justice
issue. Dependence upon any illegal drugs or inappropriate use of legal drugs may
point to deep, unmet human needs. We have a moral obligation to advocate compassionate,
harm-reducing policy. We believe that our nations have the imagination and capability
to address effectively the complex issues of the demand for drugs, both legal
and illegal.
We reaffirm the spirit of our social witness positions taken on drugs in resolutions
adopted from 1965 to 1991. Recognizing the right of conscience for all who differ,
we denounce the war on drugs and recommend alternative goals and policies. Let
not fear or any other barrier prevent us from advocating a more just, compassionate
world.