Remember the war on drugs? Yeah, it’s still going. It’s been
more than 40 years since President Richard Nixon declared the pusherman
as public enemy No. 1. If you’re wondering how successful a campaign
it’s been, that depends on your definition. Drug addiction has never
been more entrenched, and there’s an entire generation of black America
that’s lived under police occupation. It’s been a boon to tough-talking
politicians and a commoditized criminal-justice industry, but a
resounding failure everywhere else. And most people forget America is
still fighting a war on drugs. Acclaimed filmmaker Eugene Jarecki (Reagan, Freakonomics) is here to remind you.
His trenchant new documentary, The House I Live In, autopsies our decades-spanning campaign and shows how far this cancer has spread.
“It was a misguided accident of history,” he told SN&R. “We
learned this in Prohibition. We just decided to act like idiots and
repeat history again.”
As part of a multistate tour, Jarecki addressed state lawmakers at
the Capitol this past Monday. He wants them to embrace sentencing
reforms that could unpack overcrowded prisons of nonviolent drug
offenders. He says California took a step in that direction last fall,
when voters embraced Proposition 36, which amended the state’s
three-strikes law.
Senate Bill 260, introduced last month by Sen. Loni Hancock, presents
another leadership opportunity for the Golden State, the Peabody
Award-winner for 2006’s Why We Fight said. The bill would allow judges to review cases in which juveniles were tried and sentenced as adults.
“I think California has an opportunity to lead the country out of the
wilderness,” Jarecki said during a phone interview last week.
How much of the war on drugs do you think is well-intentioned—even
as a terrible policy—and how much do you think is just purely,
cynically feeding the machine?
Whether it was born to be the destructive instrument that it’s become
is another matter, and I would argue that it’s almost immaterial. …
Nixon, who declared it, is notoriously someone who said many private
things that were quite racist. Does that mean that he had a racist
agenda in the launching of the drug war? Well, that’s hard to say and
unnecessary to conjecture. What we do know is that Nixon talks tough on
crime at a time when he was actually quite smart on crime. He was
spending two-thirds of his drug budget on treatment and only one-third
on law enforcement. And so Nixon talked tough and yet, as a policy
maker, was quite progressive. He was a far cry from today.
In The House I Live In, Oklahoma prison official Mike Carpenter
says that politicians can’t do anything that makes them look soft on
crime and expect to keep office. Does that speak to something in us, the
public?
It seems to be that what Carpenter is sharing is an important new
reflection on the way the drug war unfolds. There is a weariness that
has emerged with tough-on-crime rhetoric. We’ve been fighting the drug
war for 40 years. We spent a trillion dollars. We’ve made 45 million
drug arrests. …
[W]hat do we have to show for it? We have the world’s largest prison
population. We also have the highest levels of drug demand. We have the
most epidemic drug problem of any Western nation, and generally the most
draconian laws. That’s called failure.
Do you consider what you do a form of reporting?
Yeah. Making documentaries today has a lot more in common with
journalism from once upon a time. The mark of whether I’ve done a good
job or not is whether I’ve asked the toughest questions—not only of
others, but myself, my own impulses to see things one way or another.
I want to elevate a subject that I think is [important], like the
drug war, and I don’t want to just make a strident, one-sided pamphlet
out of it. I want to get as close to the truth of the matter as I
possibly can.
Did the subjects you portray, especially within the
criminal-justice system, have an understanding of the kind of critical
investigation you were doing?
Yes, and what distinguishes the film, I think, probably more than
anything else, is how many of the strongest critics of the drug war are
insiders. They are judges, lawyers, cops, jailers, drug dealers, drug
users. It’s a widely portrayed family of American victims.
Law-enforcement officers in this country, corrections officials, are
very often hard-working, well-meaning people caught in the grips of a
system they did not design. And that system … is not designed to
rehabilitate. It’s not designed to elevate people. It’s designed to
punish.
I guess my point was tough-on-crime rhetoric didn’t used to be
unpopular. And I’m wondering to what degree the public was complicit in
feeding this war on drugs.
The drug war has democratized to some degree. It remains dominantly
destructive to black America, but it has in recent years seen growth
among poor whites, among Latinos and among women. And those demographic
changes in the footprint of the drug war have brought with them more
widespread understanding outside of just black communities of the
destructive and dysfunctional nature of drug law.
California is a state that, if you take a real hard look at it,
you’d expect it to be more progressive than it is in its
criminal-justice system. Have you followed [Assembly Bill] 109 at all,
the realignment bill that’s shifted a lot of the low-level offender
population to county control?
I have. That one’s worrisome. That threatens to take an
opportunity—i.e., the pressure on the California system to reduce its
overincarceration epidemic—and turn it into a new evil, which would be
simply shifting inmates laterally to county and other facilities that
are even less well-prepared to handle such numbers. I fear that, and I
would prefer to see solutions like Prop. 36 and S.B. 260 that simply
say, as in any system, there is a waste factor.
So, for example, S.B. 260 calls for revisiting sentences of people
who were incarcerated as juveniles. This is already something that is
shocking to other nations in the Western world.
I mean, anyone who is a Christian, anyone who believes in the
redeemability of human nature, anyone who believes in the capacity of
any human to find purpose, self-correct, should cheer the decision to
let the judge evaluate the performance record of people who were
sentenced as juveniles, for crying out loud. To make that one of the
first places you trim fat in terms of overincarceration. Does that make
sense to you? …
It does. And that’s one of those things that goes back to an
earlier California initiative as well, where we decided that we should
be able to sentence 14-year-olds to life in prison for capital crimes.
Again—hopefully S.B. 260 is a tonic to that—but it is in response to
something that California voters did agree to some years back.
My [purpose] in coming to California is to speak broadly about …
where we can improve on America’s system of criminal justice and where
California can lead the way in that endeavor. … And look, whether
California has its back against the wall or not, I’ve seen plenty of
people with their backs against the wall do stupid things. So I don’t
want to undermine good choices by California leadership by saying it’s
only because they had against their backs against the wall. I would say
it’s partly because they had their backs against the wall.
via Sacbee.com
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