In the early 1970s, the United States launched the “war on drugs,” framing it as a public safety and health response to rising drug use. Over time, historical records and later admissions from Nixon administration officials revealed the policy was also deeply political. It was not only about drugs, but about power, control, and targeting groups seen as threats. Former Nixon advisor John Ehrlichman later stated that the administration linked anti-war activists with marijuana and Black communities with heroin. By heavily criminalizing both substances, the government could disrupt those groups through arrests, surveillance, and incarceration. This admission, now widely cited in academic discussions, reframed the war on drugs as a deliberate political strategy rather than an unintended failure. The consequences were long-lasting. Drug laws grew harsher, sentencing disparities widened, and enforcement focused heavily on urban neighborhoods. Research consistently shows drug use rates are similar across racial groups, yet arrest and incarceration rates are not. This imbalance reshaped communities, families, and economic opportunities for generations. Recognizing this history does not deny the real harm caused by addiction or the need for public health solutions. It highlights that policy choices mattered. Decisions about enforcement and punishment were shaped by political priorities as much as public well-being. Understanding the origins of the war on drugs helps explain its uneven impact and why calls for reform continue today. #History #WarOnDrugs #CriminalJustice #AmericanHistory #MassIncarceration #Policy
