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All Press Releases for June 30, 2004 Subscribe to this News Feed      
 

NEUROCOPS: TOMORROWS DRUG WAR – New Report Warns Policing is Poised to Move Inside the Body and Brain –

This report by the Center for Cognitive Liberty & Ethics is the first comprehensive and critical analysis of ‘pharmacotherapy, the use of new medications designed to block the effects of illegal drugs.

(PRWEB) June 30, 2004 -- A 50-page policy report released by the non-profit Center for Cognitive Liberty & Ethics warns that the war on drugs may be about to enter a new era that expands the drug war battlefield from the Columbian coca farms and the Middle Eastern poppy fields, to a new terrain directly inside the bodies and brains of drug users." The report is the first comprehensive and critical analysis of ‘pharmacotherapy, the use of new medications designed to block the effects of illegal drugs. While acknowledging that such pharmacological aids may well benefit people who voluntarily chose to use them, the CCLE report raises concerns about potential coercive use.

COMPASSIONATE COERCION – ‘GOOD DRUGS FIGHTING ‘BAD DRUGS
In addition to waging a war on drugs," the federal government is now working to eradicate the disease" of drug use. These metaphors, notes the CCLE report, play an important role in driving federal drug control policy because they frame the remedies available to the government.

For example, the 2003 National Drug Control Strategy casts users of illegal drugs as vectors of contagion" who are in denial" about their disease" and who need treatment before transmitting the disease to others." Such language, says the CCLE report, lends itself to coercive treatment wherein the government feels justified in medicating" drug users through policies of ‘compassionate coercion. Coercion, whether ‘compassionate or otherwise, is still coercion," cautions the CCLE report.

BODILY INTEGRITY + FREEDOM OF THOUGHT
The CCLE report examines the pharmacotherapy drugs currently under development, and also highlights the legal rights that would be violated if a government were to require certain persons (such as prisoners, probationers or public assistance recipients) to take the anti-drug medications. The implicated legal rights include the right to bodily integrity, the right to privacy, the right to make ones own informed and voluntary medical decisions, and the right to freedom of thought.

The report concludes with policy recommendations, which underscore the importance of restricting pharmacotherapy medications to voluntary use.

In the absence of extraordinary circumstances," notes the report, the government should be barred from coercing a peaceful person to take a pharmacotherapy drug."

Pharmacotherapy and the Future of the Drug War is available at http://www.cognitiveliberty.org/reports.html

Hard copies of the report are available for $30.00; a PDF may be accessed free of charge.

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Stephanie Anderson
CCLE
530-750-7912
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