AND THE OSCAR FOR BEST PICTURE ON GOVERNMENT FAILURE GOES
TO..."
Steven Soderbergh's "Traffic" failed to win last night's
Academy Award for Best Picture, but its sobering lessons about the War on
Drugs make it Hollywood's most educational offering in years, explains
economist Jeffrey Miron, research fellow at The Independent Institute, in
an op-ed that appeared in yesterday's San Diego Union-Tribune, New Jersey
Record, and the Orange County Register.
"Although 'Traffic' did not win the Oscar for Best Picture of the
Year, writes Miron, "it deserves the title of Most Important Picture
of the Year."
"Traffic" does not address all of the drug war's unintended
consequences (no film could), but what it does address, it does so
brilliantly. "Traffic" Miron argues, shows how drug prohibition
causes the violence often attributed to drugs, corrupts government
bureaucrats, enriches criminals at expense of the rest of society, and
strains relations between races and nations. "Traffic" also
shows why many law-enforcement agents come to believe that the drug war
cannot be won.
Given the drug war's many casualties, the cultural impact of
"Traffic" may come to surpass that of two other recent movies
that bust the myth of good government, William Gazecki's shocking
documentary, "Waco: The Rules of Engagement" (1997) -- which
led to more Congressional hearings on the Waco raid -- and Barry
Levinson's prescient tragicomedy, "Wag the Dog" (1997) -- whose
title has become a catch phrase for presidential slights of hand
conducted with military props. If so, then perhaps the United States will
begin to wean itself from its destructive addiction to the drug
war.
(Note: For TV viewers who didn't recognize former White House Drug Czar
Barry McCaffrey in the audience at last night's Academy Award ceremonies,
McCaffrey was the one wearing egg on his face.)
See "Traffic's Lessons" by Jeffrey A. Miron, at
http://www.independent.org/tii/lighthouse/LHLink3-12-1.html.
Also see:
"The American Drug War: Anatomy of a Futile and Costly Policy
Action" by Independent Institute Research Fellows Bruce L. Benson
and David W. Rasmussen, at
http://www.independent.org/tii/lighthouse/LHLink3-12-2.html.
Bruce L. Benson and David W. Rasmussen's article, "Predatory Public
Finance and the Origins of the War on Drugs, 1984-1989" (THE
INDEPENDENT REVIEW, 1996), at
http://www.independent.org/tii/lighthouse/LHLink3-12-3.html.
D. Eric Schansberg's review of DRUG POLICY AND THE DECLINE OF AMERICAN
CITIES by Sam Staley (THE INDEPENDENT REVIEW, Winter 1998), at
http://www.independent.org/tii/lighthouse/LHLink3-12-4.html.
For more writing from The Independent Institute on illicit drugs, see
http://www.independent.org/tii/lighthouse/LHLink3-12-5.html.