Transcript for:
Understanding the Impact of the War on Drugs

hi i'm clint smith and this is crash course black american history you know every nation's government has to create policies policies or plans that detail what the government wants to achieve some of those policies have good outcomes and sometimes not so good today we're going to talk about the war on drugs a policy initiative that has gone on for years it was designed ostensibly to stop drug use and drug dealing across the united states but what ended up happening is that it entangled millions of black people in the criminal legal system for generations for some people this was an adverse consequence of a well-intentioned policy but for others this is exactly what they wanted the policy to do don't believe me well you might soon let's start the show [Music] the official war on drugs started in richard nixon's presidency in the early 1970s and according to many activists continues on to this day though officially it hasn't been as much of a national obsession since the end of bill clinton's presidency it was an initiative promoted by the federal government and multiple presidents of both political parties that aim to stop the use distribution and trade of illegal drugs but the thing is a big part of how this was implemented was by stricter more severe prison sentences in an effort to deter drug dealers and users but the outcomes of the war on drugs shows that even if you don't explicitly mention race in a policy you may still be making a policy about race sometimes that's intentional and sometimes it's not in order to understand the world on drugs we have to talk about the origins of the criminalization of black communities as we've discussed this has been consistent throughout american history but debates on how to address drug use in society began to affect black communities more directly in the 1960s even though president lyndon b johnson is best known for his great society legislation and passing the civil rights act of 1964 and the voting rights act of 1965 he also declared what was called a war on crime in march of 1965. the war on crime was not exactly the same as the war on drugs but it put in place many of the same powers that would eventually make the war on drugs as expansive and devastating as it was the war on crime produced the law enforcement assistance act which in 1965 authorized the federal government to take a direct role in militarizing local police then the safe streets act of 1968 invested 400 million dollars in the war on crime and created the law enforcement assistance administration to oversee the funding most of it went to supervise and surveil low-income urban communities even though those communities weren't the only places that crime and drugs could be found but low-income urban communities are where black people often lived these policies and research like the moynihan report a report on the poverty and black communities served to develop and spread stereotypes about black urban poverty they said that the tangle of poverty and drug use was largely the result of individual and cultural flaws the moynihan report said that quote at the heart of the deterioration of the fabric of negro society is the deterioration of the negro family it is the fundamental source of the weakness of the negro community at the present time moynihan acknowledged racism still played a role but seemed to think that the real issue was the structure of black families which given all the structural impediments black people were facing just seems off base all of this helped lead to the end of the previous war on poverty and shape the rationale legislation and policies for the war on crime grassroots organizations like the black panther party caught on to what was going on pretty quickly and organized to protect black communities from the police violence that followed from being overpoliced black americans were brutally beaten and harassed by law enforcement and many of them lost their lives they also realized the importance of political organizing and cultural power during these times so they created breakfast programs and community schools in an attempt to provide the resources for themselves that they felt the government wasn't providing them the war on drugs formally began during the nixon presidency he was the first person to use the term war on drugs and stated that drug abuse was quote public enemy number one president nixon increased federal funding for drug control agencies and in 1973 he established the drug enforcement administration or the dea a special police force targeting illicit drug use and drug smuggling the nixon administration also categorized marijuana as a schedule 1 drug which is the most restrictive drug category in the united states meaning punishments for being found with that drug would be severe during jimmy carter's presidency there were some efforts to make drug policy slightly less punitive between 1973 and 1977 11 states did decriminalize marijuana possession but the war on drugs was far from over in the 1980s president ronald reagan brought back many of the drug possession and distribution policies of the nixon administration the first lady nancy reagan even started her famous just say no campaign which was intended to address the dangers of drug use the reagan administration also pushed for smaller government more broadly arguing that the expansion of social resources like welfare programs and increased funding for community programming contributed to a sense of over-reliance and exacerbated perceived social failings during reagan's administration is when we see some of the most severe policies related to drug use in u.s history they passed harsh penalties at the federal level and encouraged state legislators to implement these harsh penalties as well this led to a massive increase of incarceration for nonviolent drug crimes and these policies disproportionately impacted black and latino communities and many argue that the reagan administration did actually intend to make some of these policies about race i mean they created the welfare queen stereotype a harmful caricature of a black woman who used welfare checks and child rearing to take money from the government while never actually saying that the welfare queen was black reagan relied on pretty racist language to promote this idea and use similar language while promoting the war on drugs in 1986 congress passed the anti-drug abuse act which also had very harmful implications for black and brown communities it created longer prison sentences for individuals who use crack cocaine which was typically used by black americans in shorter prison sentences for those who use powder cocaine which was typically used by white americans for example if a person had five grams of crack it would trigger an automatic five year sentence but a person had to have 500 grams of powder cocaine to trigger the same sentence so these were on drug policies had a disproportionate impact on communities of color because it wasn't just black people using drugs a lot of people were using drugs people of all races and all backgrounds but the presidential administrations in the united states disproportionately targeted and penalized black and brown americans for drug use and penalizing them more severely than they did their white counterparts to be clear crack cocaine had a devastating impact on the black community it created addictions deaths and drug-related crimes hamstringing many vibrant communities of color but it is important to address why this was happening there were huge structural changes happening within cities this led to white flight de-industrialization loss of employment rise of low-paying service jobs and general urban blight many black middle-class families also left the cities for the suburbs as well the loss of jobs and services in the inner cities led to the growth of alternative economies it also led to crime and social dislocation and it was the combination of all of these social economic and political forces that contributed to the devastation of drugs on the black urban community it wasn't just individual failings it wasn't culture during the clinton administration the violent crime control act allowed for over nine billion dollars to be allotted for prison construction in the u.s and eight billion dollars for one hundred thousand police officers there was also an expansion of the federal death penalty mandatory minimum sentencing and truth in sentencing incentives to encourage states to advocate for harsher punishments without parole this is also when the three strikes provision was promoted in the united states this meant that a defendant might get a life sentence for almost any crime no matter how minor if they had two prior convictions that were considered a violent offense all of these policies created a huge increase in incarceration for non-violent drug offenses going from 50 000 in 1980 to 400 000 in 1997 a disproportionate amount of these incarcerated folks were black americans and after all this the war on drugs didn't even decrease drug use some people pushed back against the criticism of the war on drugs and the subsequent consequences of mass incarceration by saying that black americans supported it but that sort of take is rooted in kind of misremembering the past as the scholars elizabeth hinton jolily kohler houseman and vesla m weaver have written calls for tough sentencing and police protection were paired with calls for full employment quality education and drug treatment and criticism of police brutality it's not just that those demands were ignored completely it's that some elements were elevated and others were diminished when blacks ask for better policing legislators tend to hear more instead most experts today agree that the war on drugs was a failure it didn't decrease the number of drugs used in many communities and it actually had some pretty awful consequences it was a catalyst that produced the carceral stain a term that in part describes the billions of dollars the u.s government filters into the criminal justice system which disproportionately affects people of color that money goes to the budgets of police sheriffs judges prosecutors defense attorneys and even prison staff here are some of the stats of what the war on drugs actually did one fbi study noted that while blacks represented only 12 percent of all illegal drug users they made up 41 of those arrested on cocaine and heroin charges women disproportionately black women are the fastest growing incarcerated population in the united states since 1970 america's incarcerated population has increased by 500 percent resulting in over 2 million people in jail in prison today and despite being only five percent of the global population the us contains roughly 20 percent of the world's prison population according to studies today black and white people use and sell illicit drugs at similar rates but black people are roughly 2.6 times more likely to get arrested for drug crimes and i've seen this firsthand i've taught in prisons where young men have been locked up for doing the same things that some of my white college classmates did the difference is that one group was targeted and another group wasn't and oftentimes that's what decides who ends up in a prison and who ends up free thanks for watching i'll see you next time crash course is made with the help of all these nice people and our animation team is thought cafe crash course is made possible by all of our viewers and supporters thanks to all of our patrons who support the show on patreon and thank you to all of you who participated in the 2021 crash course learnercoin campaign your contributions and support helps millions of learners