pbs | For the past 40 years, the war on drugs has resulted in more than 45
million arrests, $1 trillion dollars in government spending, and
America’s role as the world’s largest jailer. Yet for all that, drugs
are cheaper, purer, and more available than ever. Filmed in more than
twenty states, The House I Live In captures
heart-wrenching stories of those on the front lines — from the dealer to
the grieving mother, the narcotics officer to the senator, the inmate
to the federal judge — and offers a penetrating look at the profound
human rights implications of America’s longest war.
The film recognizes drug abuse as a matter of public health, and
investigates the tragic errors and shortcomings that have resulted from
framing it as an issue for law enforcement. It also examines how
political and financial corruption has fueled the war on drugs, despite
persistent evidence of its moral, economic, and practical failures. The
drug war in America has helped establish the largest prison-industrial
system in the world, contributing to the incarceration of 2.3 million
men and women and is responsible for untold collateral damage to the
lives of countless individuals and families, with a particularly
destructive impact on black America.
“It’d be one thing if it was draconian and it worked. But it’s
draconian and it doesn’t work. It just leads to more,” says David Simon,
creator of the HBO series, The Wire.
Instead of questioning a campaign of such epic cost and failure,
those in public office generally advocate for harsher penalties for drug
offenses, lest they be perceived as soft on crime. Thanks to mandatory
minimum sentencing, a small offense can put a nonviolent offender behind
bars for decades — or even life. Many say these prisoners are paying
for fear instead of paying for their crime.
“If you stand in a federal court, you’re watching poor and uneducated
people being fed into a machine like meat to make sausage. It’s just
bang, bang, bang, bang. Next!” says journalist Charles Bowden.
But there’s a growing recognition among those on all sides that the
war on drugs is a failure. At a time of heightened fiscal instability,
the drug war is also seen as economically unsustainable. Beyond its
human cost at home, the unprecedented violence in Mexico provides a
daily reminder of the war’s immense impact abroad, and America has at
last begun to take the first meaningful steps toward reform. At this
pivotal moment, the film promotes public awareness of the problem while
encouraging new and innovative pathways to domestic drug policy reform. Fist tap DD.
0 comments:
Post a Comment