The Non-medical Use of Legal and Illicit
Drugs in Everyday Life.
By Norman Dennis.
The way we live now is the way
that weve always lived the use of psychotropic
drugs is at the same level in all societies at all times.
Summary
Up to 1868 cannabis was freely available over the counter
in this country, but was in fact rarely used. It was not
until the 1950s that cannabis in any quantities came to
Britain, largely to be used by Asiatic, African, and West
Indian immigrants. Its use by the indigenous English was
restricted to very small circles of, for example, jazz musicians.
It was not until 1964 that for the first time there were
more arrests of whites on cannabis charges than members
of other groups. In 1964 the figures were whites, 284; other
groups, 260, a total of 544. Cannabis rapidly became part
of white youth culture. By 1967 the figures for white arrests
had climbed from 284 to 1,737. This was more than twice
the rate of increase of arrests 1964-1967 of people from
other groups. From well under 600 arrests in 1964 the figure
rose so much that by 1975, from the larger number of those
arrested, 9,000 were found guilty on cannabis charges. That
figure doubled from 9,000 in 1975 to 18,000 in 1985. The
figure had doubled again by 1989, to 34,000. It then more
than doubled from 34,000 in 1989, to 88,000 in 1999
from 600 to 88,000 in one generation. The figures for other
legal and illegal psychotropic drugs show the same steep
upward trend.
Many influential commentators say that, even if the use
of such drugs is a problem, it is age-old and universal,
and is no worse than it has ever been. The figures are wrong,
they say. What the correct figures would show would be little
change in the overall use of legal and illegal drugs. Is
their complacency on the figures justified? How sound is
the case they put forward: that the statistical rise is
just the result of moral panic? Getting people
to believe that there is no new problem is a certain way
of ensuring that the problem will not be tackled. Many or
most of those who deny that drug use has significantly increased
are the same people who claim also that drug use is not
a problem. There are several other ideas that can be used
to corrode a culture, or to ensure that people do not act
to prevent their culture being corroded, like the idea that
everybody is doing it. The figures show that
this contention is equally false. The trends have dramatically
risen, but drug use is still very much a minority phenomenon.
Introduction
One of the off-the-peg arguments that save the people who
use it from having to have any knowledge about the subject
under discussion whether it is crime, adultery, drunkenness
or drugs is that it has always been the same.
According to this argument, that things have not changed,
the idea that crime rose enormously after 1955 was an illusion
of peoples irrational fears. The argument is very
persistent that the real volume of crime has not altered.
The only people that think it has are the unsophisticated
and malevolent, especially the benighted remnants of the
respectable working class on the one hand and the forces
of conservatism on the other. All that has happened,
we are assured, is that what was hidden is now being exposed.
In this Tuesdays paper, Le Monde published a long
interview with a thirty-threeyear old French sociologist,
Laurent Mucchielli.1 According to Mucchielli, crime has
not
1 Le seuil de sensibilité des habitants augmente
avec lamélioration de leurs conditions de vie
et santé. 2 Catastrophisme permanent.what English
sociologist popularised as moral panic.
actually increased. It is just that the threshold of the
toleration of crime of the well-to-do has been lowered.1
Crime gives the false appearance of rising only because
respectable peoples psychology, generation after generation,
is that things only get worse.2 According to this argument,
that things have not changed, because upper-class students
on generous parental allowances binged at Oxford in the
1930s, a tiny proportion of their age group, nothing has
changed when students, 30 per cent of their age group, binge
on alcohol today in every city in England. Jeremy Paxman
made this point in an article in the Sunday Times, Drunk?
Throwing up is part of growing up for students. By
drunk he made clear that he meant regularly paralytic.2
Four things do give plausibility to the assertion that nothing
has changed in the levels of national bad behaviour.
The first is that examples of almost anything that can
be said about human depravity (or heroism) can be found
in almost any society at any time. The earliest books of
the Old Testament prohibit every kind of unacceptable human
behaviour imaginable. Moses would not have taken the trouble
to prohibit unacceptable conduct that did not exist
even if was only found among the heathens. If Freud is right,
what is more, the id, the unconscious of each of us, harbours
the potentiality for horrors unspeakable that are capable
in certain circumstances of expressing themselves in our
own actual conduct, and there but for the grace of
God go I.
When it comes to ordinary human weaknesses, parallels are
never difficult to find. In that sense it is true that human
nature doesnt change and these things
have happened before, theres nothing new under the
sun.
The second is that we can rarely be certain that the statistical
data collected and handed down from the past are not hopelessly
inaccurate. Nor can we be certain that observers at the
time who were not statisticians, who have informed us through
their social and political comment, through novels, poetry
and pictorial art, were not wrong. We know that some of
them were totally wrong, and that the complexity and flux
of personal and social life mean that none of them gives
us, or anyone ever could give us, a full and flawless account
of anything.
Of course, in rejecting the consensus of the contemporaneous
statistics, comment and other depictions of the past, we
could be right. We can be right for all the wrong reasons,
or without having any reason at all, good or bad. But to
rationally convince other people that our version is the
correct one, it is not enough simply to point to defects
and omissions in past statistics and past documentary and
artistic comment. It is necessary to show that we have the
evidence for what we say the statistics and comment would
have shown if they had been accurate and true. It is not
enough merely to say, I can point to defects in the
versions presented at the time, and on those grounds alone
I claim that my alternative version is correct. Without
better evidence than that which we reject, the most that
we can say is, we cant use the statistics and
comment from the past; we therefore cant say what
the truth of the past is, and nobody can. When the
mass of statistics and most commentators agreed on the same
general picture of what is the past for us, but what was
their present, we make an extraordinarily arrogant claim
when we say, without having any evidence, that our own,
different present-day version of their times is superior
to their own version of it.
The third thing is that the mix undoubtedly
does change within a given category of conduct. Heroin consumption
goes down while cocaine consumption goes up. Knocking down
old ladies increases, but beating wives and children decreases.
It can look as if drug taking as a whole, or
violence as a whole has remained the same, the
only change being in the ingredients that make up the whole.
Some of you might have heard today that, on the other hand
that (if the report is true), sexual modesty will not now
by tolerated by some social workers. For those of you who
have not heard, I am referring to the case of the 93-year-old
great-grandmother and ex-school teacher, Una Penny, who
objected to being bathed by a man. According to her son-in-law,
she was told that Gloucestershire social services had taken
legal advice that her refusal to be bathed by a man would
be an infringement of his human rights to be treated without
sexual discrimination against himself. According to the
son-in-law, social services have said she would have to
chose between having her care withdrawn, or being refereed
to a psychiatrist to see if she had trouble with men,
and have her aberration cured. The veracity of the report
is confirmed to some extent by the response of the publications
manager for Gloucestershire County Council, Stella Parkes,
which was that Old men dont complain when they
are cared for by women
but we are working with Una
and her family on the situation.3
The fourth thing that gives plausibility to the assertion
that things have always been the same, is that
in any association, or in any society, like England, people
are concerned with maintaining the current standards of
conduct.
Crime and Drunkenness in England and
Wales
On the scale of the association language that would pass
unnoticed in certain pubs would be deplored here. We are
dressed in a variety of acceptable ways. The nuns of the
convent of Bernard and Benedict in Dumass Les Misérables
would have been shocked in the unlikely event of one of
their number showing as much worldly vanity and selfcentredness
as ever to clean her teeth.4
On a national scale, in 1927 there were 110 robberies recorded
by the police in the whole of England and Wales in the whole
of the year. When the figure for 1932 was announced, 342,
public commentators were unanimous in proclaiming that this
was proof that the country was going to the dogs. About
the same level of concern was expressed when, according
to the British Crime Survey, the robbery figures rose, from
183,000 in 1991, more than a thousand times the 1927 figure,
to 353,000 in 1999, more than a thousand times the 1932
figure. There was horror when in its first presentation
of Orwells Nineteen Eighty-Four, nearly fifty years
ago, the BBC showed the rat running down the tube towards
Winston Smiths face. Something far worse
would be needed today to arouse anything like the same level
of public protest.
Mucchiellis argument, typically put by sociologists
for the past thirty or forty years, that the threshold of
toleration of anti-social behaviour of all kinds, including
crimes, has been steadily rising, and that we now in general
condemn and report crimes that we would have overlooked
as normal conduct before the 1960s, will strike most of
us, I imagine, as the very opposite of the truth. Of course
the threshold of toleration of some forms of unacceptable
social behaviour, in particular anything that can be defined
as racist, sexist, homophobic
or pro-marriage has been rising, so that now
almost nothing is permitted to cross it. But taking everything
into account, paying only due attention to these important
ethnic, feminist and social-worker topics, respectable people
have ceased to be shocked, and certainly have ceased to
report, all sorts of offensive and criminal conduct that
formerly they would have played their part in trying to
control. The tendency for the level of moral indignation
at bad behaviour to be fairly constant in all groups and
societies at all times, that is, is a totally different
phenomenon from the level and seriousness of the bad behaviour
itself in different societies and groups at different times.
The thought- and knowledge-economising assertion that with
drug use, and therefore with drunkenness and addiction,
it has always been the same is very commonly
put. Is this true of alcohol?
In nearly every society very many people have used it.
But Londons experience with gin in the eighteenth
century demolishes the argument that in a given society
the nonmedical use of the drug alcohol is more or less a
constant. (Sometimes the nothing has changed
argument is even more extreme: human beings
have always used alcohol, so whats new?) At
the beginning of the eighteenth century, Trevelyan writes,
drunkenness was uncommon among English women. Among English
men, on the other hand, drunkenness was the acknowledged
national vice
of all classes. The sub-cultures
of intoxication did not have it all their own way. There
were social movements against drunkenness. Tracts were circulated
in large numbers by religious bodies, concerned with the
damage to family life, and by what Trevelyan calls anxious
patriots.people concerned with the damage that a culture
of drunkenness inflicted on national efficiency.
After about 1720, however, drunkenness markedly increased.
Until then the drink of the common people had been ale,
if for no other reason that pure water was not always available.
But because of bumper crops, and because distilling consumed
corn, ale found that it had a new rival, worse than
itself, Trevelyan said, in the deadly attraction
of alcoholic spirits.5 Working-class gin consumption was
good for the landed interest.6 In the 1730s legislators
encouraged consumption by throwing open distilling to the
free market, and subjecting spirits to only a light tax.
Gin-drinking was decriminalised. The result
was that, during the thirty years from 1720 to 1750, among
other baleful things, did much to reduce the population
of London.7 As the appalling personal and social consequences
were exposed by the media (in the form of, for example,
Hogarths famous print of Gin Lane) and attacked by
an enlightened philanthropy, public opinion brought the
situation under control with.by the standards of today.incredible
speed. After less successful attempts, an effective Act
was passed in what was for that reason called the
blessed year of 1751. Various aspects of alcohol production,
marketing and consumption were prohibited by state regulation.
Spirits were highly taxed and their sale at retail by distillers
and shopkeepers was stopped.8 The change in public opinion,
backed and in part symbolised by the Act of 1751, did not
of course eliminate drunkenness. But drunkenness was drastically
reduced. Seventeen fifty-one was a turning point in the
social history of London and it was regarded as such both
by those who experienced its consequences in the generation
that could personally look back on 1751, and by later historians.9
The nineteenth century also proves that it is empirically
untrue that so far as the use of alcohol is concerned it
has always been the same. For in the second half of
Queen Victorias reign drunkenness and excessive expenditure
on alcohol were again subjected to fierce public condemnation,
with palpable effects on consumption. Alcohol was attacked
as one of the chief causes of crime and of the ruin of character
and of families. The prints of the great caricaturist, George
Cruikshank, The Bottle and The Drunkards
Children (1847-48), were circulated by the tens of
thousands. In the years that followed the publication of
The Bottle an organized and largely successful
attack was made on the drinking habits of all classes by
the Blue Ribbon Army. Takers of the total abstinence
pledge wore the blue ribbon on their breasts, to invite
public criticism if they did indulge in the damaging conduct
they had foresworn.10
All religious bodies promoted the Temperance movement.
It was a regular policy of Temperance societies to enlist
children before they had acquired any taste for drink. In
1909 the Church of England Temperance Society had 639,000
members, of whom 114,000 were pledged to total abstinence.
In the 1870s the Temperance party, especially strong among
the Nonconformists, became a force in local and national
Liberal politics. Temperance in those days was a movement
of the Liberal party and of most of the socialist left.
But it did not have all its own way in the propaganda battle.
It provoked the better-led activities of the brewing companies
and their great army of capitalist shareholders. In the
last decades of the nineteenth century brewers captured
the Conservative party, with whom after 1886 the government
of the country was principally to lie for many decades.
Trevelyan attributes the decline in drunkenness not only
to Temperance propaganda, but also to the increasing amenity
and diminishing monotony of workingclass life. Trevelyan
lists the following among what he called drinks
fresh enemies as the nineteenth century reached its
close: reading; music; playing and watching organized games;
bicycling and sightseeing; country and seaside holidays;
above all more active and educated minds and more
comfortable homes.
Even the brewing companies were gradually frightened or
shamed by public opinion into a more enlightened policy
in the management of the public houses they controlled,
making them more decent, more ready to see other things
besides drink, and less anxious to send their customers
away drunk. The pressure of anti-drink public opinion led
to the Conservative governments Licensing Act of 1904,
which reduced the number of public houses and other drink
outlets.
When Victoria died, alcohol use was decidedly less
than when she came to the throne.11 But, from the top to
the bottom of society, excessive drinking was still a great
evil. So far as I know all historians who deal with the
matter take this view of improvement and a large residual
problem, and the statistics on alcohol consumption per head
from population figures and the returns of Customs and Excise
confirm this. By the 1950s in this country the most careful
social surveys were showing that in England, just as the
debauched upper class had followed the bourgeoisie in sobering
up in the nineteenth century, the rough working class followed
the respectable working class in sobering up in first half
of the twentieth. Rowntree made very intensive and detailed
surveys of working-class life in York in 1899 and 1936.
He was able to state unequivocally that there was less heavy
drinking in 1936 than at the beginning of the century, not
only in York, but in the whole country.12 With a higher
standard of living, in 1936 working-class families bought
about half the volume of beer they had bought in 1899 (52
per cent). The beer, moreover, was 25 per cent weaker.
Today we assume that greater prosperity means increased
alcohol consumption. What Rowntree says about the causes
of sobriety is therefore startling to the modern reader.
Speaking of York in 1899, he says that at that time the
vast majority of the workers were living in comfortless,
overcrowded houses. A workman's house in York with a garden
or a bath was almost unknown. The number who owned their
houses was insignificant. There were no cinemas, there was
no wireless, no public library. Books worth reading were
dear. There was no music hall, and only a few working people
could afford a seat in the theatre, which was much dearer
than it is today. Bicycles were costly, and the roads bad.
Motorbicycles had not been invented. No wonder that so many
men spent their evenings and their money in public houses!
What else was there for them to do unless they wandered
about? Twenty or thirty years ago, the main street in York
was crowded, night after night, with young people walking
aimlessly up and down.13 Drunkenness was far less in 1936,
he says, because by then comfortable houses with gardens
could be counted in their thousands. Nearly 3,000 working
class families lived in the homes they owned or were buying.
The purchase of these houses, and the addition of amenities
to them (for the workers take great pride in their
homes, he says), absorb a great deal of money which
might otherwise find its way into the publican's till. Science,
industry and public enterprise, have placed within reach
of the workers forms of recreation, some undreamed of and
others far in advance of anything available forty years
ago, he writes. There are more than 25,000 wireless sets
in York, and so people can sit at home and listen to music
of all kinds, to variety entertainments, or to talks on
countless subjects; they can hear news from all over the
world-sometimes within a few minutes after the incidents
have taken place; important sporting events are reported
every day. On Sundays, in addition to the miscellaneous
programmes, they can listen to religious services. Or if
they prefer reading to listening, they can get from the
public library, free of cost, almost any book they want
either grave or gay. If they want to own books, they have
the choice of hundreds of worthwhile books which they can
buy for sixpence. If they do not want to stay at home, they
have the choice of ten cinemas where for a few coppers,
they can spend a couple of hours in watching a film that
may have cost hundreds of thousands of pounds to make. Or
if they prefer the theatre or music hall they can get comfortable
seats in either at cinema prices. The repertory theatre
is one of the best in the country. Those who want to take
exercise can buy a good bicycle for a few pounds, or a second-hand
one for a few shillings. A short ride takes them to the
open country; and no matter where they go they will find
excellent roads. Those who are more ambitions can buy a
motor-bicycle and in less than an hour be at the sea-coast
forty miles away. Many hundreds of young men in York are
saving up to buy motor-bicycles, or have already bought
them, and are spending their money in touring the country,
and have little to spare for drink. There is little doubt
that counter attractions and the higher cost of drink combined,
are preventing young people from acquiring the drink habit
a fact which is giving great concern to both publicans
and brewers as evidenced by the colossal sums they are spending
on their Drink more beer campaign.14 There were
parks and public gardens, swimming baths, cheap railway
facilities,
adult education classes and an educational
settlement. All these, and others not mentioned,
were unknown to workers in 1899. He adds, It
is an amazing list!15 What chance did intoxication
as a pastime stand against all these opportunities for self-improvement
and rational recreation?
Trevelyans judgement was that the problem of alcohol
abuse had been so far reduced by the early 1940s that gambling
perhaps now does more harm than drink.16 That it
has always been the same in the consumption of drugs
other than alcohol became a staple of university sociology
in the nineteen seventies, filtering down to teacher training
colleges, to the broadsheet press and to radio and television
commentators, into the schools and then into the great unexamined
fund of what the French call societys idées
reçues.
Drug Taking
A typical exponent in the field of psychotropic drugs of
the it has always been the same school of thought
was Jock Young. I quote from his book, The Drugtakers, published
in 1971 (when we should have been paying attention to the
alarm bells not to the siren voices).17 Publishers were
falling over themselves to get books dealing favourably
with the many aspects of the cultural revolution of the
late 1960s.pro-drugs, pro-sexual permissiveness, pro-Mao
and Che, and generally anti-establishment in the spirit
of the long march through the institutions.
You have only to glance at the titles in the Penguin lists
of this period and compare them with the titles in previous
Penguin lists to see to what extent works by establishment
intellectuals were replaced by works by our adversarial,
disruptive and counter-cultural elites. In America Ken Kesey
became a counter-cultural icon, taking advantage of the
fact that the hallucinogenic drug LSD.acid.was
not yet controlled by the law to tour the United States
(1964-65), administering acid tests and super
acid tests and dispensing LSD-laced orange juice to
all comers. Defences were so weak against the new onslaught
of drugs culture that on one occasion, when he was invited
to speak at a Unitarian Church conference on one of his
trips with his Merry Pranksters, he won some
delegates to embrace his LSD cult. Tom Wolfe through one
of his most famous books,18 and Jack Nicolson through one
of his most famous films,19 gave Kesey a world-wide audience.
He was a kind of Jack London, personally vigorous, fearless,
the enemy of humbug, and bursting with the joy of being
alive and broadly survived all his own experiments,
as some people do. But Jack London and Ken Kesey each gave
to their own and future generations a totally different
account of how a man should answer, in Jack Londons
phrase, the call of the wild.
Youngs book was a success on its own. But one chapter
from it was published as The drugtakers: the role
of the police, in what soon became as standard course
book for University courses in sociology, social administration
and social work, Butterworth and Weirs, Social Problems
of Modern Britain.20
Youngs topic was what he called the fantasy
crime wave of cannabis dealing and cannabis smoking
of the late 1960s. A fantasy cannabis crime wave is one
that does not involve at any time any actual increase in
the number of cannabis smokers.21 When the cannabis figures
rise, Young says, all that has happened is that we have
dug deeper into the undetected part of the iceberg. The
iceberg, actual consumption and dealing, is always the same
size, has always been, and will always be the same size.
Thus he writes of the emergence of large
numbers of young people indulging in deviant activities
such as drug taking, in particular areas such as Notting
Hill, at a particular time, such as the late 1960s.22 What
had always been there had emerged, that was
all. The existing large numbers of young people
consuming illicit psychotropic drugs had emerged
only because the mass media had fanned up public
indignation. The public then demanded that the police should
solve what was erroneously thought to be the growing
drug problem. The police became more active in this field.
Without there being any change in cannabis use, the statistics
for cannabis offences soared. The public, the press and
the magistrates then viewed the new figures with even greater
alarm. Increased pressure is put on the police
a
moral panic was in full flow.23 Clearly this kind of thing
can happen. Young does not show it did happen in this case.
An aspect of the extreme a historicity of the moral
panic argument.Ill say bluntly the historical
ignorance that underlies the moral panic argument.is its
assumption (and frequently explicit assertion) that each
generation has always thought that personal character and
the civic virtues have always deteriorated as compared with
the previous generation. This is demonstrably not so. To
seek no further than this country in the 3 The figures to
the nearest hundred are:
1975 8,800 - 1885 17,600 - 1989 33,700
- 1999 88,500.
nineteenth and twentieth centuries, there have been extensive
areas of social life, crime and psychotropic drugs among
them, where for considerable periods the consensus has been,
if you like, moral complacency, when the consensus
has been that things were improving, and when
social research seemed to show that they were in fact improving.
Rowntrees comparison of drunkenness in York in 1936
as compared with 1899 and other examples I have looked at
with you this evening are sufficient to show this. 24
Young and his successors never say what the statistics
and surveys are, that they claim are demolished by their
theory of moral panic and by their stale metaphors
of the lowering of the threshold, the exposure of more of
the iceberg, and so on. I sometimes feel that Id like
to test them on what they do know.
Up to 1868 cannabis was freely available over the counter
in this country, but was in fact rarely used. It was not
until the 1950s that cannabis in any quantities came to
Britain, largely to be used by Asiatic, African, and West
Indian immigrants. Its use by the indigenous English was
restricted to very small circles of, for example, jazz musicians.
It was not until 1964 that for the first time there were
more arrests of whites on cannabis charges than members
of other groups. In 1964 the figures were whites, 284; other
groups, 260, a total of 544. Cannabis rapidly became part
of white youth culture. By 1967 the figures for white arrests
had climbed from 284 to 1,737. This was more than twice
the rate of increase of arrests 1964-1967 of people from
other groups.25 From well under 600 arrests in 1964 the
figure rose so much that by 1975 from the larger number
of those arrested, 9,000 were found guilty on cannabis charges.
That figure doubled from 9,000 in 1975 to 18,000 in 1985.26
The figure had doubled again by 1989, to 34,000. It then
more than doubled from 34,000 in 1989, to 88,000 in 1999.
327
The figures at any point of time are without any doubt
defective; there are without any doubt difficulties in assessing
changes over time, as the available bases of comparison
change. But those who dismiss these figures as an illusion
created by increased police activity and unreasoning panic
have some duty to show what proportion of such a large rise
can be attributed to these factors, rather than to the factor
that seems decisive on all sorts of other grounds also,
namely, that that the illicit use of cannabis for pleasure
has indeed grown enormously since the early 1960s. The use
of psychotropic drugs in Britain was the subject of a report
from a committee of the Ministry of Health in 1926, the
Rolleston committee.28 Rolleston said that not only was
drug addiction rare in Britain, but that it had diminished
in recent years. There were two groups suffering from addiction
to opiate drugs.by far the highest proportion of addicts
at that time.to whom the administration of morphine or heroin
would be legitimate as medical treatment, namely, those
who were undergoing treatment for cure of the addiction
by the gradual withdrawal method, and those who had proved
to be incurably addicted after every effort has been
made for the cure of the addiction. According to Edwards,
the Rolleston report showed that the objective problems
of drug misuse were less threatening than at any previous
moment in at least the previous hundred years.29 The
small size of the problem meant, in Rollestons view,
that a compulsory register of addicts was not necessary.
Up to 1868 opium, too, was available without any form of
restriction. Laudanum, a pleasure tincture of opium, was
in regular and sustained use as virtually the only available
pain-killer and sleeping draught. In these circumstances,
the fact that its use for purposes of pleasure and addiction
were not more widespread is a remarkable proof of the anti-drug
culture of this and previous periods. Its use was, indeed,
endemic among a large proportion of the poorer sections
of working-class population engaged in the heaviest of manual
labour, notably in the agricultural districts of eastern
England.30 In drug discussions today the fact that opium
was in normal use in the nineteenth century
in this section of the population, to dull the pains of
continuous unrewarding toil and, for instance, to enable
mothers working in the fields to calm the babies who accompanied
them, is somehow represented as proof that it was not a
problem then, and if the same permissive attitude were to
be readopted today, it would not be a problem now as a recreational
drug.
But the condition of the opium-using labouring poor and
the welfare of their opium-controlled children was regarded
as a problem by many of the reforming organisations of the
period, political and charitable. They no more regarded
the normality of such uses by such users as
proof that it was not a problem than their predecessors
had regarded the acceptance of the normality
of slavery among by some slaves as proof that slavery was
not a problem. Though judged by figures on consumption and
poisoning its influence was not dramatic, its provisions
being laxly applied, by placing the first restrictions on
supply by restricting sales to qualified vendors, the Pharmacy
Act of 1868 marked the first victory for the reformers.
Sentiment against the non-medical use of drugs became more
general at home after 1874, with the founding of the Society
for the Suppression of the Opium Trade. Its campaign against
the Indian opium trade with China inevitably fed into opinion
about its use here. If it was bad for the Chinese, it was
bad for us as well. Over the latter decades of the nineteenth
century and the early part of the twentieth century, the
figures on consumption and poisoning deaths, and the decline
in references to it as a problem indicate that the use of
opiates gradually became less prevalent. By the beginning
of the 1914-18 war, the use of opium was assumed to be an
exotic activity restricted to some members of Chinese communities
in Limehouse and in large ports elsewhere in Britain. Expressions
of reforming concern with the evils of opium almost disappear,
with public opinion largely leaving the Chinese communities
to get on with things in their own way.
The Dangerous Drugs Act of 1920 initiated controls in essentially
the form we know today. With the exception of certain very
dilute oral preparations. for example, Collis Brownes
Chlorodyne (a compound that contains morphine) opiate drugs
were confined to medical prescription. (In the influenza
epidemic of the previous year, 1919, the police went around
with a the Police Bottle Liquorice Phenol
Chlorodyne and a desert spoon, to administer it where
they saw fit.). Regulations made under the Act controlled
import and manufacture. There were heavy penalties for infringements.
Informal controls were still exercised by pharmacists, simply
from the taken-for-granted good citizenship of the time.
Such responsible pharmacists would recognise someone who
was becoming too attached to, say, Dr Colliss quite
legal opiate medicine, and refuse to sell any more of it
to him (or her). There is no record of any appeal against
this informal social control as an infringement of the legal
or human rights of the costumer. But the Act of 1920 was
not a response to a problem of any national significance.
Great Britain was simply falling into line with international
measures, where America was the driving force. The Shanghai
meeting of 1909 had proposed the regulation of the opium
trade in the Far East. The Hague Convention of 1912 had
proposed a world-wide system of control. The Versailles
Treaty that concluded the Great War required all signatories
to introduce legislation for domestic drug control.31
In the years that followed the Rolleston report, and right
up to the beginning of the 1960s, drug problems in Britain
remained at the low levels of the period 1890 to 1926. In
1938 there were only 6 prosecutions for opium offences.
As Edwards wrote, Putting the matter in its simplest
terms, Britains drug problem was of interest exactly
and only because of its trivial size.32
There was an outbreak of concern that soldiers and sailors
on leave in London were being introduced to cocaine. It
is difficult to find any evidence for this, but anything
concerned with recruits from their own towns and villages
was likely to engage public sentiment in communities in
the provinces, still heavily influenced by their nonconformist
chapels. Very likely these reports could be properly regarded
as scare stories, as a moral panic
over a problem of minute proportions. There were only 58
prosecutions for cocaine offences in 1921.the residue of
the cocaine scare of the Great War. In 1927 there were only
2.33
When the breakdown of this equilibrium came.the stable
experience of at least two full generations of the English.it
was dramatic. Getting as close as we can to comparable figures,
the first official statistics furnished by the Home Office
to the League of Nations gave the number of all addicts
as 300 in 193434 The number of new addicts was 5,400 in
the year 1984.35 Among young people, as late as 1962 there
were only three opiate addicts under the age of 21.36 There
were over 1,200 new narcotic drug addicts under the age
of 21 in the year 1984.37 In 1985 the figures were missing
in the Home Offices annual drug report. Its excuse
was that there was a hitch in the installation of a new
computer system. But these interesting and some might think
disturbing figures never appeared again. Correct me if Im
wrong, because Id like to see them. In the mid-1960s,
for the first time in Britain, injected heroin replaced
morphine as the opiate of choice. A black market appeared,
with pure heroin freely available on the streets. The source
was drugs from the medical prescriptions of the Rolleston
system, which up to that time had been a model for the world
of decriminalised opiate treatment. The heroin problem had
mushroomed.people thought.by 1975, when 390 people were
found guilty of heroin offences. But by 1985 the figure
had risen to more than eight times that figure, to 3,200.38
By 1999 the closest comparable figure had quadrupled again,
from 3,200 to 12,800.39
Heroin was only part of what was becoming a multiple-drug
problem. As early as 1962 there was evidence that heroin
addicts were also mixing cocaine with heroin and consuming
large quantities of barbiturates. 40 The figure for people
found guilty of cocaine offences rose from 380 in 1975 to
620 in 1985.41 There were no entries in the statistics for
crack cocaine offences until 1996. The figure for cocaine
(excluding crack) was 790 in 1989. This figure rose sevenfold
in the next decade to 5,300 in 1999. From no crack cocaine
offences in 1995 the figure rose to 1,100 in 1999.42 The
Guardian on Monday (12 November 2001) dealt with the news
that the Lord Chancellors son was addicted to crack
cocaine. Without approving of it, the article nevertheless
quoted another newspapers comment that the drugs culture
was now so pervasive that it reached into the homes of the
most powerful in the land. What chance, then, had the poor
and the weak to combat it? In 1989 over a thousand children
under the age of 17 were guilty of drug offences (1,340).
By 1999 the figure was 7,540.43 In the early 1960s the use
of amphetamines began to be seen among young people in London
and other large cities, and pill-taking became part of the
café scene.44 In 1967 and 1968 the use of injected
methamphetamine became common as a replacement for cocaine.
45 Under the influence of the American hippy culture of
Kesey and others, LSD came into fashion over roughly the
same period. The statistics on drug use are more or less
defective before 1994. The British Crime Survey (BCS) has
at last provided us with a series of good statistics of
the prevalence and, what is certainly more important, the
trend in the use of psychotropic drugs for non-medical purposes.nowadays
the purpose being principally pleasure.46 The proportion
of 16 to 24 year olds reporting that they had used heroin
in the previous year tripled between 1998 and the year 2000,
from 3.0 per 1000 to 8.0 per 1000. Those reporting they
had used it in the previous month rose from 2.7 per 1000
in 1998 to 3.2 per 1000 in the year 2000.
Between 1998 and 2000, among the 16 to 19s there was a
rise in the use of cocaine, to 40 per 1000, significantly
higher, the BCS report says, than in previous sweeps.
The rise in popularity of cocaine among young people was
attributed to the reduction its price,47 and the fact that
young people are so often told (we all are), and have come
to believe, that cocaine use is somehow sensible
because it is not as dangerous as drink and cigarettes,,
and as everybody has either to smoke, drink or take drugs,
taking drugs is the best thing to do. That is one of the
bizarre results of the emphasis on harm-reduction
at the expense of prevention in the schools
and in the propaganda of the many pro-drug pressure groups
that now exist.48 In 1998 83 per 1000 had used some Class
A drug in the previous year. This had risen to 92 per 1000
in the year 2000. The use of any Class A drug in the previous
month had risen from 34 to 48 per 1000.
In the year 2000, nearly half of all 16 to 29 year olds
(440 per 1000), had used cannabis at some time, nearly a
quarter of them had used it in the previous year (220 per
1000), and more than one in ten had used it in the previous
month (140 per 1000). By the mid-1990s non-medical, so-called
recreational drug use was more prevalent among
white English youth than among either blacks, Indians, Pakistanis
or Bangladeshis.49 Between 1994 and 2000 the biggest rise
in drug use, as measured by the use of any illicit drug
in the past year, was among the young Indians, where the
proportion nearly doubled, from 70 per 1000 16-19-year-old
Indians to 120 per thousand 16-19-year-old Indians. The
proportion of 16 to 29 year olds who had used drugs increased
for all ethnic groups.with the notable exception of the
Pakistanis and Bangladeshis, the Muslims.
Intoxicating ones foes is an age-old tactic. Who
knows not Circe, The daughter of the Sun, whose charmèd
cup Whoever tasted lost his upright shape, And downward
fell into a grovelling swine?50 During the nineteenth century
Britain was not entirely disinterested when opium weakened
Chinas resistance to colonial conquest. Mao explicitly
used drugs to demotivate the Americans in Vietnam, conscious
that he was using the weapon of his countrys old oppressors
against them. During the Cold War the Czechs in particular
1 Le Monde, 13 November 2001.
2 Sunday Times, 4 November 2001.
3 A version of this alleged incident appeared in the Daily
Express, 16 November 2001.
4 Hugo, V., Les Misérables (1862), Ware, Herts.:
Wordsworth, 1994, vol. I, p. 328.
5 Trevelyan, G.M., English Social History: survey of six
centuries from Chaucer to
Queen Victoria (1942), London: Penguin, 1986, p. 356.
6 Trevelyan, English Social History, 1986, p. 329.
7 Trevelyan, English Social History, 1986, p. 358.
8 24 G. II, c. 40. Trevelyan, English Social History, 1986,
p. 356.
9 George, London Life in the Eighteenth Century, pp. 24-38.
10 Trevelyan, English Social History, 1986, p. 582. In another
connection, the device of
the ribbon on the breast has been imitated in our day to
advertise the opposite message,
that the conduct in question is not to be condemned as bad,
and that what is bad is any
criticism of it.
11 Trevelyan, English Social History, 1986, pp. 582-84.
12 Rowntree, B.S., Poverty and Progress: a second social
survey of York, London:
Longmans, Green, 1941, p. 473.
13 Rowntree, Poverty and Progress, 1941, p. 372.
14 Rowntree, Poverty and Progress, 1941, pp. 370-71.
15 Rowntree, Poverty and Progress, 1941, pp. 468-69.
16 Trevelyan, English Social History, 1986, p. 583.
17 Young, J., The Drugtakers, London: Paladin, 1971.
18 Wolfe, T., The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test, 1968.
19 One Flew Over the Cuckoos Nest, 1976.
(The book dates from 1963.)
were active in using illicit drugs to undermine the Wests
culture of law-abidingness and
to demoralise and degrade young people in capitalist societies,
as a form of chemical
warfare in which the enemy obligingly pays for his own toxins:
that was their theory and
their intention, at any rate.51
Societies that depend to any degree upon popular consent,
beyond the threat
posed from the populace to any government whatsoever of
riot, popular terror, and
insurrection, have been the exception in history. Historically,
too, peaceful and
prosperous societies based on responsible citizenship have
been short-lived. As we are
members of an association devoted to good citizenship and
named after a statesman and
general who saved the Roman republic from a foreign invader,
it is not inappropriate to
close with something another Roman patriot said as civil
wars brought the republic to an
end. Viewing the decline of commonwealth into imperial dictatorship
Cicero remarks on
the brevity and truth of the lines, Ancient morality
and the men of old/Fixed firm the
Roman state. His generation, he wrote, received the
virtues that made the republic
possible like a picture that already had almost faded away
with age. Instead of restoring
its colours, they had not bothered themselves to preserve
even its general shape and bare
outlines. The austere morality of the Roman citizen was
passing away. Who was to be
called to account for this disaster, Cicero asks. He answers,
we ourselves, for we retained
the name of commonwealth and citizen when, not through any
misfortune but through
our own laxity, whether of goodwill or misdemeanour, the
reality of both community and
duty slipped into oblivion.52
Notes
20 Butterworth, E. and Weir, D., Social Problems of Modern
Britain: an introductory
Reader, London: Fontana/Collins, 1972. .
21 Butterworth and Weir, Social Problems of Modern Britain,
1972, p. 307. Young says
that a fantasy crime wave does not necessarily
involve any actual increase in crime.
What not necessarily can mean in this context
is totally obscure.
22 Butterworth and Weir, Social Problems of Modern Britain,
1972, p. 300.
23 Butterworth and Weir, Social Problems of Modern Britain,
1972, p. 307.
24 For examples taken from education and civic safety, see
Dennis, N., The Uncertain
Trumpet, London: Civitas, 2001.
25 The number of arrests of non-whites on cannabis charges
increased from 260 to 686.
Edwards and Busch, Drug Problems in Britain, 1981, p. 10.
Were we to make the usual
assumption that the police picked on non-whites and arrested
them disproportionately to
their numbers, then the conclusion would have to be that
the rate of increase in usage in
the white group was even more rapid than the arrest figures
show.
26 Home Office Statistical Bulletin: Statistics of the Misuse
of Drugs in the UK 1985,
London: Home Office, 25 September 1986.
27 Corkery, J.M., Home Office Statistical Bulletin: Drug
Seizure and Offender Statistics,
United Kingdom 1999, London: Home Office, 2001. Found guilty
of, cautioned or given
a fiscal fine for, or dealt with by compounding.
28 Report of the Departmental Committee on Drug Dependence
(Rolleston), London:
HMSO, 1926.
29 Edwards, G., The background, in Edwards,
G. and Busch, C. (eds.), Drug Problems
in Britain: a review of ten years, London: Academic Press,
1981, p. 9. Griffith Edwards
and Carol Busch were both at the Addiction Research Unit
at the Institute of Psychiatry
when they edited this book
30 Berridge, V., Opium in historical perspective,
Lancet, 2, 1977
31 Lowes, P.D., The Genesis of International Narcotics Control,
Geneva: Libraire Droz,
1966.
32 Edwards and Busch, Drug Problems in Britain, 1981, p.8.
33 Spear, H.B., The growth of heroin addiction in
the United Kingdom, British Journal
of Addiction, 64, 1969.
34 Edwards and Busch, Drug Problems in Britain, 1981, pp.
9-10.The figures are for
opiate addicts on the Home Office index.
35 Home Office Statistical Bulletin: Statistics of the Misuse
of Drugs in the UK 1984,
London: Home Office, 3 September 1985. The figures are for
narcotic drug addicts
notified to the Home Office.
36 Edwards and Busch, Drug Problems in Britain, 1981, pp.
9-10.
37 Home Office Statistical Bulletin 1984, 1985.
38 Home Office Statistical Bulletin: Statistics of the Misuse
of Drugs in the UK 1985,
London: Home Office, 25 September 1986.
39 Corkery, Home Office Statistical Bulletin, 2001. Persons
found guilty, cautioned, given
a fiscal fine or dealt with by compounding.
40 Cameron, Heroin addicts in a casualty department,
British Medical Journal, 1, 1964.
41 Home Office Statistical Bulletin 1985, 1986.
42 Corkery, Home Office Statistical Bulletin 1999, 2001.
Sentenced, cautioned, given a
fiscal fine, or dealt with by compounding.
43 Corkery, Home Office Statistical Bulletin 1999, 2001.
Sentenced, cautioned or dealt
with by compounding only.
44 Connell, P.H., What to do about pep pills,
New Society, 20 February 1964. Connell,
P.H., Amphetamine misuse, British Journal of
Addiction, 60, 1964.
45 Hawks, D., Mitcheson, M., Ogbourne, A. and Edwards, G,
Abuse of
methylamphetamine, British Medical Journal, 2, 1969.
46 Sharp, C., Barker, P., Goulden, C., Ramsay, M. and Sandhi,
A., Drug misuse declared
in 2000: key results from the British Crime Survey,
Findings 149, London: Home
Office, 2001.
47 Corkery, J.M.., Home Office Statistical Bulletin: Drug
Seizure and Offender Statistics:
United Kingdom 1998, London: Home Office, 2000.
48 Boys, A. and others, Cocaine Trends: a qualitative study
of young people and cocaine
use, London: National Addiction Centre, 2001.
49 The highest rate for all groups was among those defining
themselves as being of
mixed ethnicity.
50 Milton, Comus, 50-53.
51 Douglass, J.D., Red Cocaine: the origins of America's
drug plague, Atlanta, GA:
Clarion House, 1990.
52 Cicero, De Republica, 5, 1.
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