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Cocaine: An Unauthorized Biography [Hardcover]

Dominic Streatfeild
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Hardcover: 510 pages
  • Publisher: Saint Martin's Griffin,U.S.; American ed edition (4 Sep 2002)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0312286244
  • ISBN-13: 978-0312286248
  • Product Dimensions: 23.9 x 16 x 4.6 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 1,430,053 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Dominic Streatfeild
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Product Description

Synopsis

Examines the history of cocaine from its first medical uses to the worldwide issues it presents today.

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
15 of 16 people found the following review helpful
By taking a rest HALL OF FAME
Format:Hardcover
"Cocaine; An Unauthorized Biography", by Dominic Streatfield should be read by anyone who holds public office, anyone who campaigns as a warrior against drugs, and anyone else that thinks the problem of the abuse of cocaine and its variants originates outside of The United States. Coca leaves have been in use for several thousand years, and they are still in use today. Whenever you drink a Coke from Coca Cola, Coca Leaves contribute to the taste. There is NO narcotic in the product; Coke has a subsidiary corporation in Chicago, Stepan Chemicals, which removes the cocaine from the leaves prior to their use in creating the drink. Remember the disaster that was "New Coke"? New Coke did not use the Coca Plant, the public hated it, and Classic Coke was brought back to market instantly, with the Coca leaves once again present.

Streatfield went anywhere he needed to write this story, if that meant going to Columbia and meeting with some of the largest producers of the drug he did. He met with paramilitary groups that are fighting the Columbian Government, and he met with the smallest of producers. It is no exaggeration to say that he routinely went where is was somewhat likely he would not return.

As you read the book you will gain the incredulous attitude that the author developed as he researched this book. For the reality is that Cocaine has flowed in to the United States and will continue to do so regardless of the money that is spent to prevent it. We share a nearly 2,000-mile border with Mexico whose government has been only too happy to assist in the transportation of the drug to the US. This country also has thousands of miles of seacoast that cannot possibly be watched. You will read of seizures of Cocaine that is measured in tons! These seizures have no effect on the drug trade. For confirmation on how fruitless the "war on drugs" has always been you need only to read the interviews with DEA Agents and a variety of other law enforcement officials.

The issue of cocaine and the resources that are spent on it are absurd. The issue of drugs will get you votes if you run for office, and that is where the value of cocaine lies. A few numbers may help to illustrate how our elected officials waste billions of dollars every month.

Between 40 and 50 BILLION dollars are spent per year to prevent the movement, use, etc, of illicit drugs. This does not include the money spent on the largest prison population on the planet and the cost of building new facilities. What does the US get from its 50 BILLION dollar expenditure on drugs? There is zero income and the lives lost from all illicit drugs per year in the US are around 6,000 people.

The biggest drug that kills in this country kills more than all of the following causes combined, car accidents, all illicit drugs, suicides, AIDS, homicides, and accidental gun deaths. This drug is of course tobacco. You can research the numbers yourself, but they will fall between 400,000 and 450,000 deaths per year. If the current rate of new smokers stays constant the young people under the age of 18 at present will contribute 6 MILLION more bodies to the death toll. Alcohol kills between 100,000 and 125,000 people per year. Car accidents kill about 1,000 people per week.

Even though the Federal Tax on cigarettes has dropped from 31% per pack in 1960 to 11% in 2000, 6.3 billion dollars is collected. The states collect a comparable amount; I found that Maine expects 98 Million in revenue this year. Unfortunately The Fed pays out over 600% more for healthcare for smokers, some 38 Billion. But that type of fiscal incompetence is routine for Washington, and I have not even mentioned the massive amounts of dollars the tobacco companies pour in to the pockets of those running for office.

What this book does is put illicit drugs in to perspective. There is clearly more harm done by Cocaine than just those who die from it. Law enforcement officials are killed, and one death cannot be justified in this "war".

Whether it is Cocaine, Heroin, Crack, or a host of pharmaceutical drugs, if someone wants to use them they can get them. They always have, and they always will.
So what has the public been protected from after hundreds of billions of dollars have been spent on this war?, little to zero. The men and women who have died during their service in this war gave their lives for what?

The drugs that kill hundreds of thousands people every year are legal and they produce income from taxes. They are socially acceptable, and when given the blessing of legality is elevated above the satanic illegal drugs. When one person dies from an illicit drug lawmakers go berserk. When 75 die from cigarettes for each death from illicit drugs, what outrage takes place? None! Alcohol provides 20 bodies for a single drug death. Drunk drivers per year kill thousands. The numbers suggest 4-5 corpses from drunk driving for every illicit drug death.
I cannot find the adjective to describe the CEO who testified before congress that, "cigarettes are as addictive as chocolate chip cookies". As long as the government and the people who vote them in to office tolerate this kind of theater of the absurd nothing will change.

Cocaine is a problem because it has been vilified. The damage it does is negligible when compared to the drugs that kill on a genocidal scale yearly. I no more advocate the use of cocaine than I do tobacco. But when it comes to prioritizing the problems that cause tremendous damage to this country, cocaine is not going to be anywhere near the top of my list.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
Brilliant 26 Jan 2005
By A Customer
Format:Paperback
A subjective, informed , and well written look at a highly emotive topic.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta)
Amazon.com:  28 reviews
22 of 23 people found the following review helpful
Fun, exciting, interesting read 13 Aug 2002
By K. E Pearce - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
I picked this book up randomly at Heathrow Airport. I've been wanting to read that history of salt book and figured that this would be an okay second choice.

I was wrong - it was an AMAZING choice. I could not put this book down.

Fun facts, hilarious commentary, outstanding research, and true journalistic investigation.

I hope that this book catches on... I've already promised my copy to 10 people.

Are you the type of person who likes to learn new things and share them with others? Get this book.

Do you like to read alternative accounts of history? Get this book.

Do you like informative writing with a humorous bent? Get this book.

I hope to read more by this author in the future.

9 of 9 people found the following review helpful
Fascinating and thorough 24 Jun 2002
By A Customer - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
Streatfield has written a very interesting account of the history of cocaine from its use in the Andes thousands of years ago to the present day. The book is full of information, stories, personal anecdotes, and legends all interwoven in a light-hearted and humourous style.

He goes in depth into the impact of the drug trade on society and politics in a number of countries as well as providing a thorough review of how cocaine emerged on the European social scene in the late nineteenth century.

He writes as a fascinated observer rather than as a historian - a style which takes a bit of getting used to but overall enhances the reader's enjoyment.

You might not agree with all of Streatfield's opinions but it will give you a new perspective on the cocaine trade, its impact on America, and what can be done about it. The book is fascinating and an eye opener - worth picking up.

15 of 17 people found the following review helpful
From coca leaves to cocaine powder to freebase 9 July 2002
By "gmwerner" - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
Streatfield treats us to a well-researched saga of a nondescript plant turned worldwide scourge.

The harmless looking coca plant was a staple of native South American societies for millennia. The continent's natives chewed a compound based on coca leaves to increase their endurance during long, trans-mountain treks; the chewing of which also reduced the food they would need on these grueling voyages. Coca, when taken in this manner, would provide a prolonged, but mild effect, in comparison with the 'high' that comes from the more pure forms of the substance that have been produced by modern science, medicine, and 'criminal enteprise'.

Streatfield explores the newfound interest in the plant occasioned by medical research in the late 19th century, when many doctors and scientists, during the course of studying this remarkable drug, almost invariably found themselves 'addicted' to it. (Whether cocaine can truly be called 'addictive' is still a subject of debate and controversy. Opponents of the appellation 'addictive' emphasizing that cocaine, unlike drugs such as heroine and alcohol, does not produce withdrawal symptoms in the user who ceases its intake. This is anoverblown debate, unfortunately, as, like many high-profile debates in society, the point of contention is not substantive but semantic.)

Streatfield documents the decline of cocaine use in the early to mid 20th century, and tracks its subsequent rise on the heels of the blossoming drug culture of the 1960's. One interesting point involves the attempted duplication, by an American distributor, of the smoked variety he sampled in a South American labaratory. Unawarre of the crude nature of the mixture, he set a scientist upon the task; and the result was not the comparably weak cocaine smoked in the remote laboratories, but the first ever purification of cocaine into freebase. This massively more potent form, together with the relatively short nature of the high, were to revolutionize the drug culture in America, especially in the inner cities.

Most impressive about Streatfield's work, however, are the steps he takes to get firsthand knowledge, not only of the drug, but of the persons involved in the violent trafficking thereof. He visits and interviews many persons- law enforcement agents, imprisoned dealers, and even the armed compounds of wanted Colombian kingpins- putting himself in predicaments that have been the death of many before him.

This book provides a wonderful history of the plant itself, and a tremendous survey of the politics, crime, and fortunes that have arisen alongside it in the last 40 years. Fascinating.

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