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Smoke and Mirrors: The War on Drugs and the Politics of Failure
Smoke and Mirrors: The War on Drugs and the Politics of Failure
Author: Dan Baum
Creator: Roger Donald
Publisher: Little Brown & Co (T)
Category: Book

List Price: $24.95
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Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 22 reviews
Sales Rank: 665677

Media: Hardcover
Edition: 1st
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 396
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.5
Dimensions (in): 10 x 6.8 x 1.5

ISBN: 0316084123
Dewey Decimal Number: 363.450973
EAN: 9780316084123
ASIN: 0316084123

Publication Date: June 1996
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Condition: Some wear on book from reading, spine creases, wear on binding and pages.

Also Available In:

  • Paperback - Smoke and Mirrors: The War on Drugs and the Politics of Failure

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Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com Review
In a retrospective look at the war on drugs in the United States, journalist Dan Baum calls the nation's drug policy "as expensive, ineffective, delusional and destructive as government gets." He examines the Nixon White House's effort to turn the drug war to political advantage and the Carter Administration's brief flirtation with decriminalizing marijuana. He also details the cover-ups and blunders of some of the biggest drug busts in the country's history. Yet despite the policy's ineffectiveness, at least 85 percent of Americans oppose legalization. Baum sheds light on the reasons for this issue and calls for radical compromise.

Product Description
A critical study of the federal campaign against illegal drugs shows how, despite billions spent over successive administrations, high incarceration rates, and the compromise of civil liberties, drugs continue to spread. National ad/promo. Tour.


Customer Reviews:   Read 17 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars the real dope, and some real dopes   January 15, 2008
 4 out of 5 found this review helpful

Not often does a book manage to be thoroughly depressing, and irresistibly gripping at the same time. Dan Baum pulls it off with style here.

In the face of Baum's soberly marshaled evidence the core thesis of the book becomes indisputable: the never-ending War on Drugs is a political ploy both parties are wedded to because fear gets votes, and makes a marvelous rationale for bigger bureaucracies, more government spending and deeper intrusion into the lives of the usual suspects.

Baum shows that nobody running this "war" could imagine drugs will disappear from American life, but pretending to hold off hordes of pop-eyed, drooling perverts has morphed from a good scare tactic for the Silent Majority to an absolute requirement for anybody who aspires to elective office.

He debunks claims that outlawing marijuana keeps kids away from heroin and cocaine so thoroughly you can't escape sharing his conclusion: marijuana's illegal because there are a lot of voters who'd like to outlaw being weird, lazy or unkempt; because catching pot growers, dealers and smokers creates a lot of jobs; and (he doesn't say outright, but you can't help figuring) because legalizing marijuana would be the thin end of the wedge that might take all the profit out of the cocaine and heroin industries.

What I found much more disturbing than the cynical futility of our drug laws--which hasn't really been news for decades--was the catalog of Constitutional rights we've lost to make things easier for the lawmen.

By the end of this book, it's hard to resist the conclusion that the '60s not only failed to revolutionize American politics, but provoked a current of revulsion against the supposed abuse of Constitutional protections--especially the Fourth Amendment--that has segued seamlessly into the Patriot Act and Guantanamo. Anybody for a police state?




5 out of 5 stars AWSOME!   November 29, 2007
 2 out of 3 found this review helpful

The most comprehensive book I've read on how our drug policy got to where it is now. Very helpful to read index of character to keep track of whose who.


5 out of 5 stars A great book!!   September 14, 2007
 2 out of 3 found this review helpful

This book was a complete and thorough account of the history of US drug war. I loved it.... it was unbiased and covered all the facts.


4 out of 5 stars The War on Drugs? An Abysmal Failure   February 5, 2006
 6 out of 7 found this review helpful

Each year illicit drugs claim the lives of at least 450 Australians. In WA alone, heroin overdoses have cost more than one life per week so far this year. Politicians, health officials, the police and community in general are struggling to devise a solution to this drug menace.

American journalist, Dan Baum, in 'Smoke and Mirrors', has convincingly shown how NOT to approach the problem. Drawing on extensive research in the US, he begins his account after President's Nixon's election in 1968 and traces the ultimately futile War on Drugs through to the early phases of the Clinton Administration. Baum takes the reader through a series of case studies, anecdotes and interviews with key players in the drug war, and repeatedly exposes the cynicism, folly, ineptitude and sometimes racism of politicians and bureaucrats in trying to cope with drug use and abuse in society. Always in the background and, for Baum, at the heart of the problem, is the hitherto unchallenged policy of prohibition which Baum makes clear is seriously flawed in both practice and principle.

The cost of this unswerving campaign is staggering by any account. During the Bush years alone, $120 billion was spent on the Drug War. In addition, there has been the enormous cost in terms of human rights violations and crushed civil liberties, best documented by Baum in the harassment, imprisonment and occasionally shooting, of "harmless potheads and the generally peaceful growers who supply them".

The much-vaunted War on Drugs had its genesis in the turbulent 1960s when the counter-culture - as manifested in the massive Vietnam War protests, rock music and alternative lifestyles - reached its zenith. For Nixon, marijuana was a potent symbol of such "decadence" and its use was vigorously opposed primarily for this reason - not because of its pharmacological properties. Indeed, Baum makes clear that the Drug War has generally had little to do with drugs per se and a lot to do with crude political opportunism.

Seizing upon the issue of drugs to target political opponents, the Nixon White House went as far as to enlist television producers in the anti-drug fight through popular cop shows and sitcoms such as Mannix, Mod Squad, Hawaii-Five-O, Mission Impossible and My Three Sons. What they didn't expect, from another quarter in the entertainment industry, was Elvis Presley's unsolicited arrival at the White House in 1971 complete with a nickel-plated .45 automatic as a gift for the President. Elvis virtually begged to be co-opted into the White House's anti-drug campaign but seemed just as keen to souvenir another police badge of which he was an avid collector. The supreme irony, noted by Baum, is that the "King", a legendary dopehound, was a credentialed Special Assistant in the Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs when he died in 1977 of what was essentially a drug overdose.

By the mid-1970s when Jimmy Carter was elected President, drugs had all but disappeared from the political radar. A more enlightened drug policy was adopted even if it was orchestrated by politically naive advisers. A Presidential Commission on Marijuana, stacked with conservatives, made the embarrassing recommendation in 1970 that marijuana be decriminalised, a step which Nixon refused to consider. In fact, he blamed the Jews for wanting to liberalise America's drug laws.

However, the War on Drugs was resurrected with a vengeance when Ronald Reagan took office in 1982. Within a short space of time there were savage cuts to drug prevention and treatment, and a boost to "hard" drug enforcement bodies, eg. the Coast Guard, FBI and the increasingly powerful Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA). More significantly, draconian mandatory minimum sentencing laws were passed leading to a doubling of the prison population during the Reagan years. The ideological shift saw the leadership of drug policy taken away from doctors and scientists, and passed to untrained, inexperienced and emotionally motivated parents. As a consequence, the drug war was sharply directed at teenagers and those who allegedly fostered their habits such as makers of drug paraphernalia. It was hardly surprising then, that a full 83% of Americans surveyed in 1986 believed it was proper to "dob-in" to the police family members who consumed drugs. One teenage girl in California who did so, soon afterwards found herself placed in foster care as a ward of the state while her parents faced 3 years in gaol.

The arrival of cocaine then its derivative, crack into the drug mainstream in the 1980s - both largely media beat-ups according to Baum - fueled wild speculation. By then, anti-drug rhetoric was reaching fever-pitch as evidenced by bizarre and hysterical pronouncements from those in the forefront of the drug debate. One prominent Congressman wanted to exile drug offenders to remote Pacific islands. William Bennett, Reagan's top drug czar and himself a chain-smoker, suggested beheading drug dealers while one of his high-ranking colleagues ventured the opinion that "homosexuality seems to be something that follows from marijuana use". Former LAPD chief, Darryl Gates, proclaimed that "casual drug users should be taken out and shot ...". Even Nancy Reagan, who framed the naive slogan of "Just Say No" to drugs, weighed in to the debate on recreational drug use. Brimming with indignation, she declared that the casual drug user is an "accomplice to murder".

Meanwhile, those dissenting voices critical of the War on Drugs often remained one step ahead of drug enforcement authorities. Baum recounts several amusing instances of citizens who turned the tables on officious bureaucrats and ridiculed the po-faced anti-drug zealots. For example, when urine-testing became widespread in American workplaces, wily entrepreneurs started selling pre-bottled, drug-free urine through mail-order catalogues. A drug legalisation advocate embarrassed the McDonald's hamburger chain by pointing out that its plastic coffee stirrers were being used as cocaine spoons. McDonald's promptly recalled the offending items amidst great embarrassment. And when drug-sniffing dogs at airports were nabbing traveller's with large cash deposits, procedures had to be re-evaluated when it was discovered that minute traces of cocaine are present on up to 96% of all US currency bills.

In the concluding stages of Baum's account of the unwinnable War on Drugs, he points to the growing chorus of law enforcement agents, public health experts, judges, academics, influential newspaper editors and a few brave politicians who have begun to question the cost-effectiveness of prohibition and unswerving commitment to zero tolerance of drug use. Although he doesn't flag any alternatives to these failed policies, Baum makes it clear that the longstanding taboo of discussing any policy other than total prohibition, needs to be lifted.

Baum ends his highly readable and entertaining book with a telling quote from (non-inhaler) President Bill Clinton who stated in 1992 that, "The definition of insanity is doing the same old thing over and over again and expecting a different result". All politicians, please take note.



5 out of 5 stars One of the most important books ever published. Excellent writing, and a very easy read..   September 12, 2005
 8 out of 12 found this review helpful

There is conformity in our society, and it is a scourge that kills human spirit. It's a kind of ignorance, a common human narrow-mindedness that is at the root of keeping human beings from tolerating each other.

Similarly, at the root of this book's subject is the conformed intolerance emanating from people who believe that alcohol, caffeine and tobacco are the only recreational drugs that should be allowed to be legal and that, more specifically, cannabis should be illegal. This is conservative American mentality since the popularity of cannabis, at least among American whites, the vast majority of Americans, is relatively recent as compared to the popularity of the former drugs.

Ruthless, corrupt capitalists are the main force behind our corrupt drug laws. This book provides factual information to prove that money and power grubbing politicians and other lawmakers and law enforcers are the people who make the drug wars corrupt. In fact, politicians, judges, lawyers and law enforcers stand to gain in many ways by joining this corrupt war on recreational cannabis users. Baum doesn't stop at pointing out this fact, he gives a list of these people, right at the beginning of the book, presented like a movie or play presents its cast of characters. This is good. For over the past 40 years, the real life story of conservatives who have sold their souls in order to bust harmless cannabis users and thereby boost their political etc. careers is very much like an incredible play, a tragedy on a mass scale.

Huge prisons have been built to incarcerate all of these harmless cannabis users, and it is a fact that during a recent recession, the prison industry (criminal labor) was one of the few industries that remained profitable. A conservative TV pundit recently exclaimed how proud she is that we now live in a conservative time. But we should not be proud of how such conservatives abuse innocent people. Which they do, very much so. IF I WAS PRESIDENT, I WOULD RELEASE ALL WHO HAVE BEEN INCARCERATED FOR DRUG USE ONLY. THEN I WOULD INCARCERATE ALL WHO HAVE PROFITED AT THE EXPENSE OF RUINING INNOCENT LIVES.

One of the excellently reported true stories in this book:

In the late '70s, there was a woman who became enraged that her local record store was displaying cannabis paraphernalia (pipes, cigarette papers etc.) because she felt that children should not be exposed to such things in a shop such as this. To some extent, I agree with her. But she and Nancy Reagan spearheaded the "Just Say No" campaign, a bastion of conformity if there ever was one. It's overkill. Why not legalize cannabis and then campaign etc. to remove the selling of it and its paraphernalia from the public's line of sight, just like minors aren't allowed to enter into a cocktail bar?

I'll tell you what I'm outraged about. That ruthless capitalist schmuck from New York City who pushed his cannabis pipes business into those stores. He didn't give a crap about the children. As a result of this kind of ruthless capitalistic behavior, the straights got livid, went overboard with drug laws and propaganda, and now hundreds of thousands of innocent people languish in prisons. Like in playing music, a little bit of sensitivity and compromising to others' needs goes a hell of a long way to furthering a better, more tolerant, openminded and ultimately less corrupt society. This is the direction that soceities such as Holland's takes, and it makes theirs better than ours. I'd love to be proud of my nation, but this is what keeps me from being so. This is America, a damn thieves' hall where anything goes as long as you're ruthless enough to get away with it. Where people kick each other around in the name of "survival of the fittest" while this mentality inevitably makes a hell hole of everyone's lives, particularly those who aren't greedy, who aren't so good at kicking people around. Ours is a society that is running as fast as it can away from tolerance. People who call themselves Christians and condone this behavior are corrupt by default; nothing could be further from the teachings of Jesus.

But surely the most outrageous of true stories described in this book are the ones about how parents and siblings participate in the arresting of their family members who use illegal recreational drugs. Particularly the rehabilitation centers that abuse youths who are sent there by their parents. What kind of a parent would do such a thing? I'll tell you what kind. The kind that has accepted the idea that careers, formal schooling and conformed behavior is the only way to live. This is extreme conformity. Most of the ancestors of such people would likely slap them upside the face for their inhumane treatment of their children. Absolutely incredible levels of inhumane conformity have taken over the minds and hearts of too many people in our society. It needs to stop. Or else we really will become living proof that Bradbury was correct in his prediction of a ruthless, overly conformed society in the novel "Fahrenheit 451."


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