|
[PDF print version]
On May 3, the Washington Post's David Von Drehle wrote a
Style Section profile of Susan Cheever, biographer of Alcoholics Anonymous
founder Bill Wilson. In the article, we learn that as Wilson was dying of
emphysema, he--the man who has inspired millions to kick the bottle--asked
his caretakers for three shots of whiskey. Over his last days, he asked
three more times for a drink. He was never given one.
Cheever says she was "shocked and horrified" that Wilson would want whiskey
on his deathbed, and confesses that her "blood ran cold" when she read of
his request in the nurses' logs of the last days of his life. Though she
doesn't say so explicitly, the implication is that Cheever--and I would
imagine a good percentage of people who read Drehle's article--took relief
in the fact that the man who founded Alcoholics Anonymous remained clean and
sober to the very end.
I don't know why Bill Wilson was denied those three shots of whiskey.
Perhaps alcohol would have reacted poorly with the medication he was on.
Perhaps it was against the policy of the hospital or medical center where he
was staying. Whatever the case, I'm not at all shocked or horrified that
Bill Wilson asked for whiskey as he was dying. But I am saddened that a
dying man was denied one of the few things that may have given him some
comfort. And I find it even sadder that anyone would be relieved to hear he
was denied that final drink.
There are a couple of ways of looking at drug addiction. One way calls for
rehabilitation when a person's craving for a substance begins to take a toll
on his health, his job, his mood, and/or on those around him. That is, drug
or alcohol use only becomes a problem when, well, when it actually becomes a
problem.
The other way looks at overcoming drug and alcohol addiction as an end unto
itself. There are no "functional" or "recreational" users. Drug and alcohol
use ought to be fought at every turn. Overcoming the craving for a drink, or
the urge for a hit, is always a victory, even if rehabilitation wreaks
greater costs on the user and on society than continued use.
It's this second approach to drug and alcohol use that causes us to put a
higher priority on preserving the purity of Bill Wilson's legacy than on
granting a dying man the small comfort of a shot of whiskey. It's also the
kind of zero-tolerance, win-at-all-costs thinking that motivates our 30-year
war on drugs.
[Top of Page]
Last month, Jacob Sullum wrote an article for Reason magazine's website
about Richard Paey, a 45-year-old father of three in constant, chronic pain
from a car accident, back surgery, and multiple sclerosis. Unable to find a
doctor after moving to Florida, Paey covertly obtained the painkillers he
needed for relief. Because the painkillers contained oxycodone (the drug
war's latest fashionable target), and because Paey obtained more than 28
grams of the drug (about 60 pills), he was arrested last March for drug
trafficking. Paey was tried and convicted. Though both prosecutors and jury
conceded that Paey wasn't a dealer, their hands were tied by uncompromising
drug-war policy. He was sentenced to 25 years in prison.
In September 2002, federal agents raided a Santa Cruz, California, hospice
where many of the terminally ill patients smoke marijuana cigarettes to
alleviate their pain. Agents pointed their guns at the head of Suzanne Pfeil,
an elderly post-polio patient, and demanded that she get up from her bed.
She couldn't. She's crippled. They settled on handcuffing her to the bed for
over an hour, while they raided the hospice's medicine cabinets and files
for evidence of medicinal marijuana use. DEA Administrator Asa Hutchinson
insisted the agents were only doing their job: enforcing federal
controlled-substance laws.
The same mindset that finds a symbolic victory over alcoholism more
important than a deathbed drink for a sick man can see fit to justify a
25-year prison term for an oxycodone-using MS sufferer and handcuffing an
elderly post-polio marijuana user to her bed at the point of a gun.
It's the mindset that says victory over drug addiction is an end unto
itself, regardless of method, costs, or consequences. It's a mindset that
fails to consider, for example, that no kid stops or starts smoking
marijuana because federal agents do or don't raid convalescent centers in
California; that no one's decision to lubricate life's monotonies with
Oxycontin is based on whether Florida prosecutors decide to pursue
distribution charges against an MS patient.
Likewise, the millions of people who have benefited from Bill Wilson's
Alcoholics Anonymous program aren't going to go back on the bottle upon
learning that Wilson asked for booze in his final days. And it's tough to
see how that would be any different if he'd actually gotten his "last call."
[END]
|