People like Bill O'Reilly repeatedly throw this statistic out to paint a picture of addicts running around shooting and mugging people. But what is the truth?
Even if we accept the validity of the statistic as the percentage of drug users convicted of crimes, how many of these people were actually committing crimes with real victims in accordance with the picture being painted by the prohibitionists?
A large percentage of this number is made up of people convicted of possessing drugs - buying, selling, or possession. While I don't know the number I would expect that over half are convicted of possession, say, 60%, which means about 30% of the crime is committed by "addicts" (apparently every user is an addict). But the number shrinks even more when we acknowledge that some of these addicts are engaged in and convicted of prostitution to purchase drugs - maybe 3% of the 30%.
But the number decreases even more given the fact many addicts who steal from others to pay for drugs do so not because the drugs they are using somehow compels them to commit crimes, but because they run out of drugs and need money to buy more drugs. Claiming the need for money to buy the drugs is no different than "compelling" these people to commit crimes ignores the picture painted by the prohibitionists - that the drugs biologically induce criminal behavior. Johnny uses pot, and the pot makes Johnny shoot his neighbor because pot induces violence, rather than Johnny shoots his neighbor in a bungled mugging because he needs money to buy pot, etc.
The problem with this equation is that if it's not so much the drugs that induce crime but the need for money to buy drugs, then a policy - prohibition - designed to inflate the cost of drugs is linked to the crime. A heroin addict willing to steal from others to raise money for heroin needs to steal alot more - with more victims - if the heroin costs hundreds of dollars rather than the few dollars the drug would cost if legal.
If the cost of food was inflated by 40 times with a gallon of milk costing $100, the resulting crimes committed by people to raise money to buy food would be the result of a stupid policy as well as people willing to steal. If 25-30% of crime is committed by addicts, how much of this is committed by people trying to raise money for drugs rather than people committing crimes while "drug-crazed"? I'd bet much of this 25-30% is the result of people committing property crimes or muggings to raise the money to buy drugs.
That would leave us with about 10-15% of the crime - real crime with victims - in this country committed by people who were "compelled" by the drugs to commit their crimes. But the statistic is actually smaller given the fact some of the crime categorized as "drug-related" is the result of the black market - crime that does not include possession, but the Mafia/gangs fighting over marketshare.
How much is a matter of speculation, but I'll bet the percentage of "drug-related" crime actually committed by addicts who were "compelled" to commit their real crimes by the drugs is 1-3%!
Anyone know of a site that actually breaks down crime statistics to show a more accurate picture?
Even if we accept the validity of the statistic as the percentage of drug users convicted of crimes, how many of these people were actually committing crimes with real victims in accordance with the picture being painted by the prohibitionists?
A large percentage of this number is made up of people convicted of possessing drugs - buying, selling, or possession. While I don't know the number I would expect that over half are convicted of possession, say, 60%, which means about 30% of the crime is committed by "addicts" (apparently every user is an addict). But the number shrinks even more when we acknowledge that some of these addicts are engaged in and convicted of prostitution to purchase drugs - maybe 3% of the 30%.
But the number decreases even more given the fact many addicts who steal from others to pay for drugs do so not because the drugs they are using somehow compels them to commit crimes, but because they run out of drugs and need money to buy more drugs. Claiming the need for money to buy the drugs is no different than "compelling" these people to commit crimes ignores the picture painted by the prohibitionists - that the drugs biologically induce criminal behavior. Johnny uses pot, and the pot makes Johnny shoot his neighbor because pot induces violence, rather than Johnny shoots his neighbor in a bungled mugging because he needs money to buy pot, etc.
The problem with this equation is that if it's not so much the drugs that induce crime but the need for money to buy drugs, then a policy - prohibition - designed to inflate the cost of drugs is linked to the crime. A heroin addict willing to steal from others to raise money for heroin needs to steal alot more - with more victims - if the heroin costs hundreds of dollars rather than the few dollars the drug would cost if legal.
If the cost of food was inflated by 40 times with a gallon of milk costing $100, the resulting crimes committed by people to raise money to buy food would be the result of a stupid policy as well as people willing to steal. If 25-30% of crime is committed by addicts, how much of this is committed by people trying to raise money for drugs rather than people committing crimes while "drug-crazed"? I'd bet much of this 25-30% is the result of people committing property crimes or muggings to raise the money to buy drugs.
That would leave us with about 10-15% of the crime - real crime with victims - in this country committed by people who were "compelled" by the drugs to commit their crimes. But the statistic is actually smaller given the fact some of the crime categorized as "drug-related" is the result of the black market - crime that does not include possession, but the Mafia/gangs fighting over marketshare.
How much is a matter of speculation, but I'll bet the percentage of "drug-related" crime actually committed by addicts who were "compelled" to commit their real crimes by the drugs is 1-3%!
Anyone know of a site that actually breaks down crime statistics to show a more accurate picture?
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