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22 Crim. Just. Ethics 30 (2003)
On the Decriminalization of Drugs

handle is hein.journals/crimjeth22 and id is 30 raw text is: George Sher / 30

On the Decriminalization of Drugs

GEORGE SHER

In his lively and provocative paper, Four Points About
Drug Decriminalization,' Douglas Husak advances two
main claims: first, that none of the standard arguments
for criminalizing drugs are any good, and, second, that
there is little evidence that drug laws deter drug use. In
these comments, I will not take up the second claim (though
I must admit to some skepticism), but I do want to take
issue with the first. My strategy will be, first, to sketch

three pro-criminalization arguments that I take to have
real weight; second, to respond to an objection of Husak's
that, if sound, would tell against all three of my argu-
ments; and, third, to confront the related objection that we
cannot consistently support the criminalization of nar-
cotics without also supporting the criminalization of al-
cohol.

I Three Arguments for Criminalization

I begin with two ritual disclaimers. When I say that there
is a good case for continuing to attach criminal penalties
to the use of narcotics, I do not mean that that case ex-
tends to any particular schedule of penalties or to any
special list of drugs. I am sure that many drug sentences,
both past and present, are far too harsh. I am also willing
to concede that the harms and bads associated with some
drugs-marijuana is the obvious example-may not be
significant enough to justify attaching even minor penal-
ties to their use. I do think, however, that the harms and
bads associated with many other drugs are sufficiently
weighty to justify their continued criminalization. The
drugs of which I take this to be true include heroin, co-
caine, methamphetamine, LSD, and ecstasy, among oth-
ers.
What, then, are the main arguments for criminalizing
these drugs? They are, I think, just the familiar ones: drug
users harm themselves, they harm others, and they do not
live good lives. At the risk of sounding like an eighth-
grade teacher, or a drug czar, I will briefly sketch each
argument.

George Sher, author of Beyond Neutrality: Perfectionism
and Politics, is Herbert S. Autrey Professor of Philosophy at
Rice University, Houston, Texas.

(1) The paternalistic argument
The nature of the harms that drug users risk is of course a
function of the drugs they use. Thus, to borrow a point
from Peter de Mameffe, heroin harms the user by sapping
his motivation and initiative.2 Also, because heroin is
addictive, using it now forecloses the option of comfort-
ably not using it later. By contrast, cocaine and metham-
phetamine do not have only these effects (though crack
is by all accounts highly addictive), but their regular use
also significantly increases the risk of heart attack and
stroke. Furthermore, by drastically enhancing self-confi-
dence, aggression, and libido, these drugs elicit behavior
that predictably culminates in high-speed collisions,
shootouts in parking lots, and destroyed immune sys-
tems. Other drugs have still other destructive effects: LSD
can trigger lasting psychosis; ecstasy harms the brain,
impairs the memory, and, taken with alcohol, damages
the liver; and so on. Thus, one obvious reason to continue
to criminalize these drugs is simply that many persons
deterred by the law from using them will thereby be spared
serious injury.
(2) The protective argument
Just as drug use can harm the user, so, too, can it harm
others. Drug use harms strangers by involving them in
the collisions, shootouts, and other catastrophes to which
the impaired and overly aggressive are prone. It harms

Criminal Justice Ethics

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