Chasing the Scream

Chasing the Scream

by

Johann Hari

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War on Drugs Term Analysis

The war on drugs is a decades-long, U.S. government-led campaign to combat the illegal drug trade. Its initiatives include laws prohibiting drugs, harsher prison sentences for those caught possessing or selling illegal drugs, and military intervention to reduce international drug trafficking. The term was coined in 1971 after President Richard Nixon deemed drugs “public enemy number one,” but Hari traces the campaign’s roots all the way back to the 1930s. Though the war on drugs originated in the U.S., countries around the world have instituted similar policies over the last century.

War on Drugs Quotes in Chasing the Scream

The Chasing the Scream quotes below are all either spoken by War on Drugs or refer to War on Drugs. For each quote, you can also see the other terms and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
Drug Legalization and U.S. Policy Theme Icon
).
Chapter 1 Quotes

Anslinger had his story now. He announced on a famous radio address: “Parents beware! Your children…are being introduced to a new danger in the form of a drugged cigarette, marijuana. Young [people] are slaves to this narcotic, continuing addiction until they deteriorate mentally, become insane, [and] turn to violent crime and murder.”

Related Characters: Johann Hari (speaker), Harry Anslinger (speaker)
Page Number: 17
Explanation and Analysis:

Billie didn’t blame Anslinger’s agents as individuals; she blamed the drug war itself—because it forced the police to treat ill people like criminals. “Imagine if the government chased sick people with diabetes, put a tax on insulin and drove it into the black market, told doctors they couldn’t treat them,” she wrote in her memoir, “then sent them to jail. If we did that, everyone would know we were crazy. Yet we do practically the same thing every day in the week to sick people hooked on drugs.”

Related Characters: Johann Hari (speaker), Billie Holiday (speaker), Harry Anslinger
Page Number: 31
Explanation and Analysis:

It is easy to judge Harry Anslinger. But if we are honest, I suspect that everybody who has ever loved an addict—everybody who has ever been an addict—has this impulse in them somewhere. Destroy the addiction. Kill the addiction. Throttle it with violence. Harry Anslinger is our own darkest impulses, given a government department and a license to kill.

As I researched this book, I traveled a long way from the farm fields of Pennsylvania—but at every step, I began to feel I was chasing the scream that terrified little Harry Anslinger all those years ago, as it echoed out across the world.

Related Characters: Johann Hari (speaker), Harry Anslinger
Related Symbols: Screaming
Page Number: 32
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 2 Quotes

In the pharmacies, morphine had cost two or three cents a grain; the criminal gangs charged a dollar. The addicts paid whatever they were told to pay.
The world we recognize now—where addicts are often forced to become criminals, in a desperate scramble to feed their habit from gangsters—was being created, for the first time. The Williams brothers had watched as Anslinger’s department created two crime waves. First, it created an army of gangsters to smuggle drugs into the country and sell them to addicts. In other words: while Harry Anslinger claimed to be fighting the Mafia, he was in fact transferring a massive and highly profitable industry into their exclusive control.

Second, by driving up the cost of drugs by more than a thousand percent, the new policies meant addicts were forced to commit crime to get their next fix.

Related Characters: Johann Hari (speaker), Harry Anslinger , Henry Smith Williams , Edward Williams
Page Number: 36-37
Explanation and Analysis:

Henry Smith Williams assumed that Anslinger—and prohibition—were rational, like him. They were not. They are responses to fear, and panic. And nobody, when they are panicking, can see the logical flaws in their thought.
Harry worked very hard to keep the country in a state of panic on the subject of drugs so that nobody would ever again see these logical contradictions. Whenever people did point them out, he had them silenced. He had to make sure there was no room for doubt—in his own head, or in the country—and no alternative for Americans to turn to.

Related Characters: Johann Hari (speaker), Harry Anslinger , Henry Smith Williams , Edward Williams
Page Number: 41
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 3 Quotes

Whenever any representative of another country tried to explain to him why these policies weren’t right for them, Anslinger snapped: “I’ve made up my mind—don’t confuse me with the facts.”

And so Thailand caved. Britain caved. Everyone—under threat—caved in the end. The United States was now the most powerful country in the world, and nobody dared defy them for long. Some were more willing than others. Pretty much every country has its own minority group, like African Americans, whom it wants to keep down. For many, it was a good excuse. And pretty much every country had this latent desire to punish addicts. “The world belongs to the strong,” Harry believed. “It always has and it always will.” The result is that we are all still stuck at the end of the barrel of Harry Anslinger’s gun.

Related Characters: Johann Hari (speaker), Harry Anslinger (speaker)
Page Number: 44
Explanation and Analysis:

It is a natural human instinct to turn our fears into symbols, and destroy the symbols, in the hope that it will destroy the fear. It is a logic that keeps recurring throughout human history, from the Crusades to the witch hunts to the present day. It’s hard to sit with a complex problem, such as the human urge to get intoxicated, and accept that it will always be with us, and will always cause some problems (as well as some pleasures). It is much more appealing to be told a different message—that it can be ended. That all these problems can be over, if only we listen, and follow.

Related Characters: Johann Hari (speaker), Harry Anslinger
Page Number: 44-45
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 4 Quotes

There would be many more bullets, but I was going to learn on my journey that Arnold Rothstein has not yet died. Every time he is killed, a harder and more vicious version of him emerges to fill the space provided by prohibition for a global criminal industry. Arnold Rothstein is the start of a lineup of criminals that runs through the Crips and the Bloods and Pablo Escobar to Chapo Guzman—each more vicious because he was strong enough to kill the last.

[…]

And I was going to see that, like Rothstein, Harry Anslinger is reincarnated in ever-tougher forms, too. Before this war is over, his successors were going to be deploying gunships along the coasts of America, imprisoning more people than any other society in human history, and spraying poisons from the air across foreign countries thousands of miles away from home to kill their drug crops.

Related Characters: Johann Hari (speaker), Harry Anslinger , Billie Holiday , Arnold Rothstein , Henry Smith Williams , Edward Williams
Related Symbols: Screaming
Page Number: 57-58
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 5 Quotes

For Chino, the war on drugs was not a metaphor. It was a battlefield onto which he woke and on which he slept.

Related Characters: Johann Hari (speaker), Chino Hardin
Page Number: 66
Explanation and Analysis:

“That one act of human compassion…I went into her cell and started talking to her. And all my shit stopped.”

Related Characters: Chino Hardin (speaker), Deborah Hardin
Page Number: 76
Explanation and Analysis:

There will always be some people who are violent and disturbed and sadistic—but human beings respond to incentives. In Chino’s neighborhood, the financial incentives for a kid like him were to step up the violence and the sadism—because if he did, he would have a piece of one of the biggest and most profitable industries in America, and if he didn’t, he would be shut out and left in poverty.

Related Characters: Johann Hari (speaker), Chino Hardin , Arnold Rothstein
Page Number: 80-82
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 6 Quotes

But on I-95, Leigh began to see the act of pulling over a car to search it in a new way. Once, she saw this scene as a soldier in a just war approaching the enemy. Now she sees it as a meeting of people who are surrounded by ghosts. As he approaches the car, the police officer has ranged behind him the ghosts of all the cops he has known, “all the funerals he’s been to, all the people who’ve been killed in traffic stops—because it’s a lot,” she says. And then “there’s also this poor black kid” in the car. Sitting in the passenger seats behind him are his ghosts—all of his relatives and friends who have been killed in police raids or vanished into the American prison system.
Neither can see the other side’s ghosts. They can only hate.

Related Characters: Johann Hari (speaker), Leigh Maddox (speaker), Harry Anslinger
Page Number: 95
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 8 Quotes

Harry Anslinger employed Joe Arpaio in 1957 to be an agent in the Federal Bureau of Narcotics, and he rose through the bureau over decades. Since 1993, he has been the elected sheriff of Maricopa County, Arizona. He was eighty when I met him, and about to be elected to his sixth consecutive term. His Stetson, his shining yellow lawmaker’s badge, and his sneer have become national symbols of a particular kind of funhouse-mirror Americana, and his hefty chunk of Arizona, home to nearly four million people, is now Harry Anslinger’s last great laboratory. Sheriff Joe has built a jail that he refers to publicly as his “concentration camp,” and presidential candidates flock here during election campaigns, emerging full of praise. Anslinger said addicts were “lepers” who needed to be “quarantined,” and so Arpaio has built a leper colony for them in the desert.

Related Characters: Johann Hari (speaker), Joe Arpaio (speaker), Harry Anslinger , Rosalio Reta
Page Number: 105
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 9 Quotes

At first, when the murders began, people would run in panic from the death scenes. Then it changed. They started to stop and stare. Then it changed again. They would just walk on by. As if it was normal. As if it was nothing. Because in Juárez, it was. People were training themselves not to see, to dismember the part of them that sees the dismembering.

But Juan and his teenage friends refused to live in a city where murder was ignored.

Related Characters: Johann Hari (speaker), Juan Manuel Olguín
Page Number: 118
Explanation and Analysis:

If you are the first to kill your rivals’ relatives, including their pregnant women, you get a brief competitive advantage: people are more scared of your cartel and they will cede more of the drug market to you. Then every cartel does it: it becomes part of standard practice. If you are the first to behead people, you get a brief competitive advantage. Then every cartel does it. If you are the first to behead people on camera and post it on YouTube, you get a brief competitive advantage. Then every cartel does it. If you are the first to mount people’s heads on pikes and display them in public, you gain a brief competitive advantage. Then every cartel does it. If you are the first to behead a person, cut off his face, and sew it onto a soccer ball, you get a brief competitive advantage. And on it goes.

Related Characters: Johann Hari (speaker), Harry Anslinger , Arnold Rothstein
Page Number: 126
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 10 Quotes

That is when Marisela heard rumors that started to make it possible to make sense of this whole story. Sergio, she was told, is a Zeta. That is why the police would not touch him. That is why he kept escaping. When Marisela got her final lead on where Sergio was, the police were finally honest with her. “If he’s with the Zetas, we’re not going to be able to do anything, because they run the state,” they told her. “If we do a bust, it’s because they allow us to do it. We don’t bust people just like that.” They were apologetic, but they explained that the Zetas give them money if they serve them and death if they don’t.

Related Characters: Johann Hari (speaker), Harry Anslinger , Sergio Barraza , Marisela Escobedo , Rubi Fraire , Billie Holiday , Henry Smith Williams , Edward Williams
Page Number: 137
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 11 Quotes

The United Nations says the war’s rationale is to build “a drug-free world—we can do it!” U.S. government officials agree, stressing that “there is no such thing as recreational drug use.” So this isn’t a war to stop addiction, like that in my family, or teenage drug use. It is a war to stop drug use among all humans, everywhere. All these prohibited chemicals need to be rounded up and removed from the earth. That is what we are fighting for.

I began to see this goal differently after I learned the story of the drunk elephants, the stoned water buffalo, and the grieving mongoose. They were all taught to me by a remarkable scientist in Los Angeles named Professor Ronald K. Siegel.

Related Characters: Johann Hari (speaker), Ronald K. Siegel
Page Number: 145
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 13 Quotes

Almost all the funding for research into illegal drugs is provided by governments waging the drug war—and they only commission research that reinforces the ideas we already have about drugs. All these different theories, with their radical implications—why would governments want to fund those?
[…] [Eric Sterling] told me that if any government-funded scientist ever produced research suggesting anything beyond the conventional drugs-hijack-brains theory, […] the head of NIDA would be called before a congressional committee and asked if she had gone mad. She might be fired. She would certainly be stopped. All the people conducting the science for NIDA—and remember, that’s 90 percent of research on the globe into illegal drugs—know this.

So they steer away from all this evidence and look only at the chemical effects of the drugs themselves. That’s not fake—but it’s only a small part of the picture.

Related Characters: Johann Hari (speaker), Carl Hart (speaker), Bruce Alexander , Harry Anslinger , Robert DuPont , Gabor Maté
Page Number: 179
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 15 Quotes

Suddenly, the slightly depressing debate at the start of the drug war between Harry Anslinger and Henry Smith Williams—prohibition forever versus prescription forever—seems bogus. But in this clinic, they have discovered that that isn’t the real choice. If you give hard-core addicts the option of a safe legal prescription and allow them to control the dose, the vast majority will stabilize and then slowly reduce their drug consumption over time. Prescription isn’t an alternative to stopping your drug use. It is—for many people—a path to it.

Related Characters: Johann Hari (speaker), Harry Anslinger , Henry Smith Williams
Page Number: 221
Explanation and Analysis:

Just as when all legal routes to alcohol were cut off, beer disappeared and whisky won, when all legal routes to opiates are cut off, Oxy disappears, and heroin prevails. This isn’t a law of nature, and it isn’t caused by the drug—it is caused by the drug policy we have chosen. After the end of alcohol prohibition, White Lightning vanished—who’s even heard of it now?—and beer went back to being America’s favorite alcoholic drink. There are heroin addicts all across the United States today who would have stayed happily on Oxy if there had been a legal route to it.

This is worth repeating, because it is so striking, and we hear it so rarely, despite all the evidence. The war on drugs makes it almost impossible for drug users to get milder forms of their drug—and it pushes them inexorably toward harder drugs.

Related Characters: Johann Hari (speaker)
Related Symbols: Alcohol Prohibition
Page Number: 231
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 16 Quotes

In his office, Goulão told me there were two dimensions to Portugal’s drug revolution. The panel didn’t simply lift the legal penalties and leave people to it. They took the big, lumbering machinery of the drug war and turned it into an equally big, active machine to establish a drug peace. “The big effect of decriminalization,” he said, “was to make it possible to develop all the other policies.” In the United States, 90 percent of the money spent on drug policy goes to policing and punishment, with 10 percent going to treatment and prevention. In Portugal, the ratio is the exact opposite.

Related Characters: Johann Hari (speaker), João Goulão (speaker), Chino Hardin
Page Number: 239
Explanation and Analysis:

We all—the vast majority of drug warriors, and the vast majority of legalizers—have a set of shared values. We all want to protect children from drugs. We all want to keep people from dying as a result of drug use. We all want to reduce addiction. […] When we move beyond the drug war, we will be able to achieve those shared goals with much greater success.

At the start of my journey, I set out to find an answer to a contradiction within myself, and within our culture—between the impulse to be compassionate to addicts, and the impulse to crush and destroy our addictive impulses. Now, at last, I see—and really feel—that it is not a contradiction at all. A compassionate approach leads to less addiction. […] This isn’t a debate about values. It’s a debate about how to achieve those values.

Related Characters: Johann Hari (speaker), Harry Anslinger , João Figueira
Page Number: 252
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 18 Quotes

With legalization, the fevered poetry of the drug war has turned into the flat prose of the drug peace. Drugs have been turned into a topic as banal as selling fish, or tires, or lightbulbs.

As Barbara speaks, all the killing—from Arnold Rothstein to Chino’s gang to the Zetas—is being replaced by contracts. All the guns are being replaced by subordinate clauses. All the grief is being replaced by regulators and taxes and bureaucrats with clipboards.

[…]

I am bored at last, and I realize a tear of relief is running down my cheek.

Related Characters: Johann Hari (speaker), Chino Hardin , Arnold Rothstein
Page Number: 290
Explanation and Analysis:
Conclusion Quotes

I didn’t threaten to sever the connection: I promised to deepen it.
As I write this, he is passed out on my spare bed. […] I looked him just now, lying there, his face pallid again, and as I stroked his hair, I think I understood something for the first time. The opposite of addiction isn’t sobriety. It’s connection. It’s all I can offer. It’s all that will help him in the end. If you are alone, you cannot escape addiction. If you are loved, you have a chance. For a hundred years we have been singing war songs about addicts. All along, we should have been singing love songs to them.

Related Characters: Johann Hari (speaker), Hari’s Relative , Hari’s Ex-Boyfriend
Page Number: 293
Explanation and Analysis:

I try now to picture Harry as the first dose of opiates washes through his system and it makes him still and calm. What does he think in that moment? Does he think of Henry Smith Williams and Billie Holiday and his order to his agents to “shoot first” when they saw drugs? Does he think of the scream he heard all those years before as a little boy in a farmhouse in Altoona, and of all the people he had made scream since in an attempt to scrub this sensation from the human condition—or does he, for a moment, with the drugs in his hand, hear, at last, the dying of the scream?

Related Characters: Johann Hari (speaker), Harry Anslinger (speaker), Billie Holiday , Henry Smith Williams
Related Symbols: Screaming
Page Number: 298
Explanation and Analysis:
Get the entire Chasing the Scream LitChart as a printable PDF.
Chasing the Scream PDF

War on Drugs Term Timeline in Chasing the Scream

The timeline below shows where the term War on Drugs appears in Chasing the Scream. The colored dots and icons indicate which themes are associated with that appearance.
Introduction
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...addicts, whom he calls “my tribe, my group, my people.” Nearly every country wages a war on drugs and treats addicts as criminals. Hari has long opposed this approach, but he is actually... (full context)
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One morning, Hari decides to learn about the bigger picture of the war on drugs . He throws away his pills and flies to New York City to start interviewing... (full context)
Chapter 1: The Black Hand
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When Hari arrives in New York and begins interviewing experts, he learns that the war on drugs didn’t start with President Nixon or Reagan in the 1970s or 1980s. Instead, it started... (full context)
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...“eradicate all drugs, everywhere.” In just three decades, he transformed the agency and launched the war on drugs . (full context)
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...and agreed to keep their secrets to protect their reputations. This was the point: the drug war was never originally about fighting addiction, as it claims to be today. Instead, it was... (full context)
Chapter 2: Sunshine and Weaklings
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...and Henry Williams. In his research, Hari discovers that these men were some of the drug war ’s first opponents. Henry Williams was a stern Los Angeles doctor who, like Anslinger, hated... (full context)
Chapter 4: The Bullet at the Birth
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...is why, over the decades, the level of violence has continued to escalate in the war on drugs . And it’s also why Hari sees Arnold Rothstein, Harry Anslinger, and Billie Holiday as... (full context)
Chapter 5: Souls of Mischief
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To understand how the drug war looks today, Hari decides to ask a drug dealer. Through a friend, he meets the... (full context)
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...Smokie attacked a random elderly man. He went back to prison. Hari concludes that “the war on drugs was not a metaphor” for Hardin—he was literally fighting a war to terrorize others and... (full context)
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...that street dealing is only “the first layer” of the far-reaching violence caused by the drug war . (full context)
Chapter 6: Hard to Be Harry
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...during a drug bust. When she visited Toatley in the hospital, Maddox realized that the war on drugs was needlessly killing police officers—just like it needlessly killed her best friend, Lisa Taylor. She... (full context)
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...much of their funding. Like Chino Hardin, she had every incentive to keep fighting the drug war . But she also started empathizing with the people she arrested. She joined Law Enforcement... (full context)
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...She still meets too many people who will never get their lives back from the war on drugs . (full context)
Chapter 7: Mushrooms
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The “dealers and users and cops” who choose to join the war on drugs aren’t the only ones who have died from it. There are also “mushrooms.” They’re people... (full context)
Chapter 8: State of Shame
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...that people like Leigh Maddox and Chino Hardin are trying and failing to imitate the drug war ’s “founding fathers,” Harry Anslinger and Arnold Rothstein. But Hari knows that others have taken... (full context)
Chapter 9: Bart Simpson and the Angel of Juárez
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...those responsible for Mexico’s drug violence: “Time Is Short […] Seek Forgiveness.” Because of the drug war , Ciudad Juárez is the most dangerous city in the world. Overall, Mexico has seen... (full context)
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...from Hari’s comfortable life in London, the two cities are intimately tied together through the drug war . Three people exemplify its story: “an angel [Juan Manuel Olguín], a killer [Rosalio Reta],... (full context)
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...catch up by adopting the same strategies, and the cycle repeats. This is why the drug war consistently becomes more and more violent over time: drug prohibition rewards whoever uses “the most... (full context)
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...concludes, Reta never would have become a sadistic, ruthless killer if it weren’t for the war on drugs . After their interview, Treviño becomes the Zetas’ leader and is then captured by the... (full context)
Chapter 10: Marisela’s Long March
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Rosalio Reta’s story represents the most extreme violence of the drug war , but Hari wants to understand how everyday Mexicans experience it. This is how he... (full context)
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Marisela’s son now lives in the U.S. He tells Hari that the drug war has killed too many innocent people like his mother—and it hasn’t even reduced drug use.... (full context)
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In Mexico, the drug war has killed countless people and badly weakened government institutions. But the Mexican people didn’t choose... (full context)
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...given Mexico a dilemma: money or a bullet. If Mexico refuses to join the U.S.’s drug war , the U.S. will undermine Mexico’s economy. Hari can only imagine how Rubi Fraire, Juan... (full context)
Chapter 11: The Grieving Mongoose
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During his research, Hari often asks himself what the drug war ’s true purpose is. Officially, according to the UN and the U.S. government, it’s to... (full context)
Chapter 12: Terminal City
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...to keep people addicted, I’d design exactly the system that we have right now.” The drug war attacks, ostracizes, and criminalizes people, which exacerbates the pain that drives them to use drugs.... (full context)
Chapter 13: Batman’s Bad Call
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...on “smoke and mirrors” because governments only fund research that advances the tenets of the drug war . Eric Sterling, a lawyer who helped write national drug policies, agrees. He tells Hari... (full context)
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Reflecting on his research, Hari realizes that he still hasn’t figured out why the drug war started in the early 1900s, why people so easily accept Anslinger’s message, and why societies... (full context)
Chapter 14: The Drug Addicts’ Uprising
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On the day that Osborn met Margaret, he already knew that the drug war made overdoses far worse. Under drug prohibition, addicts don’t know how pure their drugs are,... (full context)
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...wouldn’t lose their housing for publicly coming out. For the first time ever in the drug war , addicts “were putting prohibitionists on the defensive.” (full context)
Chapter 15: Snowfall and Strengthening
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Hari’s findings surprised him: he used to assume that the U.K. fought the war on drugs exactly like the U.S., just a bit less intensely. Historically, the U.K. also outlawed drugs... (full context)
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...visits Geneva, the city where Harry Anslinger first forced the international community to join his war on drugs —and where the Swiss government is now starting to dismantle it. In the 1980s and... (full context)
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...When Swiss citizens challenged Dreifuss’s clinics, she made the opposite argument from Harry Anslinger: the drug war causes chaos and disorder, whereas the clinics create order and peace. In two different referendums,... (full context)
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...She refused—instead, she helped found the Global Commission on Drug Policy, which lobbies against the drug war . (full context)
Chapter 16: The Spirit of ‘74
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...massive spike in drug use, Goulão was busy repurposing “the big, lumbering machinery of the drug war ” to focus on treatment and prevention instead. (full context)
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...to hire them, and it helps them start small businesses. Hari again notes that the drug war does the opposite: it marks addicts for life with a criminal record, making it nearly... (full context)
Chapter 17: The Man in the Well
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...isolation are much more responsible for addiction than the chemical hook in drugs. Whereas the drug war spreads trauma and isolation in order to fight the chemical hook, legalization exposes a few... (full context)
Chapter 18: High Noon
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...wants to know how it can become politically possible—particularly in the U.S., which launched the war on drugs . In less than a decade, activists got marijuana legalized through public referendums in the... (full context)
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Mason Tvert and Tonia Winchester attacked Harry Anslinger’s war on drugs from completely opposite angles. Tvert defended marijuana as a healthier alternative to alcohol, and he... (full context)
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...system in order to legalize it. Meanwhile, Colorado’s legalization campaign also saw echoes of Anslinger’s drug war . One local sheriff argued that marijuana users should be executed, while a Latinx radio... (full context)
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...state official, Hari realizes that they’re totally boring. This is what it means for the drug war to end: replacing violence and death with boring government regulation. Hari cries “a tear of... (full context)
Conclusion: If You Are Alone
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...the addicts in his life: his relative and his ex-boyfriend. He constantly thinks about the drug war ’s victims. For over a century, they have been dying unnecessarily. Among others, Hari remembers... (full context)
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...an intervention to try and whip their addicted loved one into shape. But this is drug war logic, and it doesn’t work. People connect with drugs when they can’t connect with other... (full context)
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...is the best way to fight addiction, and nothing has interrupted it better than the war on drugs . By criminalizing and ostracizing addicts, modern societies only cut them off even further from... (full context)
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...his desire to use drugs fades away. However, while Hari is no longer “fighting a drug war in [his] own head,” numerous people—mostly poor people and people of color—are still fighting a... (full context)
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...Holiday’s godson—who works with heroin addicts at a San Francisco homeless clinic—clearly sees that the drug war is a mistake, too. And yet ending it often seems politically impossible. But Hari remembers... (full context)
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...set the stage for others to succeed decades later. The first step to overcoming the drug war is the same as the first step to overcoming addiction: make a connection with someone... (full context)
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...boy in Pennsylvania, and “all of the people he had made scream since” through his war on drugs . Or perhaps he finally felt the scream fade away. (full context)