John Singleton with Bob HowardRip Van Australia (Stanmore: Cassell Australia, 1977), pp. 80-81, under the heading “Drugs”.

Our drug problem is very largely the creation of short-sighted, though well-intentioned, government legislation. Drug taking is a victimless activity. In other words, if someone wants to take drugs, and someone else is willing to sell them, a trade takes place. Provided there is no fraud perpetrated by the seller, no rights are violated and so no crime is committed. It could well turn out that the person taking drugs will end up a hopeless victim of his own vice, but he is not a victim of a crime. Since the function of the law and government should be to concern themselves with crimes only, it should in no way be involved in the “protection of people from themselves” (a Hitlerian concept) or the welfare of drug victims. This latter task can (and is already) better handled by voluntary agencies like the Wayside Chapel in Sydney.

Government legislation, as previously reiterated, is immoral and impractical. It turns innocent people into criminals, and is the chief cause of the drug industry. It drives the industry underground, enormously increases prices, reduces supplies, increases demand (the attraction of the forbidden fruit), provides a profitable industry for criminal activity, corrupts police forces and parliaments, and pushes many unfortunate people into a life of real crime — robbery, burglary, and worse — in order to finance their increasingly expensive habits.

As in many other areas of activity, most attempts at solving the “drug problem” treat only the symptoms, and do little to get at the causes. The obvious first questions to be asked, in general, and in particular, are: Why do people take drugs? and Why does this person take this drug? Equally obviously, there is going to be a unique answer for each person, but it is, perhaps, possible to isolate certain common elements in these various causes.

We believe the central reason is a desire to escape, temporarily or permanently, from a high stress situation to a lower stress situation. In this regard, there is little difference between a desire to get drunk, a desire to get high, or a desire to get stoned. Therefore, if we can in any way reduce stress we will be contributing in a meaningful way to the solution of the drug problem (and alcoholism and many other problems). In this regard, most legislation simply compounds the problem because it increases the already exorbitant amount of external regulation that we suffer under. It shows a brutal misunderstanding of the very nature of the problem, and is nothing more than an out of sight, out of mind, sweep-the-dust-under-the-carpet type of “solution”.

As the amount of social, political and economic regulation increases, and modern life becomes increasingly more complex, mental stress increases too. Add to this irrational family environments (part of a vicious circle of neurotic parents playing neurotic games with their children) and an authoritarian education system, and it is little wonder that many young people are turning to drugs, or at least opting out of conventional society.

Nature is ruthlessly logical. Cause and effect apply as inexorably to psychology as to physics. Our legislators can continue to ignore this fact but they will not be able to ignore the consequences.

Finally, it should be reiterated once again that legislation aimed at banning drugs is based on the authoritarian legal principle of guilty until proven innocent. This is seeping into our laws to an alarming extent, and should be challenged and stopped at the first possible opportunity.