Opiate Addiction Stereotypes and Racism: A Troubled History
We’ve been talking the past couple posts about the misconceptions that people hold concerning opiate addiction and opiate addicts and how those misconceptions work to prevent those who need it from receiving the treatment they need. Today, it’s racism I want to talk about, racism and its early connections with prejudice against those struggling with drug addiction, and opiate addiction specifically.
Racism and Opiate Addiction: Today Versus Yesterday
Today, racism and addiction comes in many forms. It’s apparent in the fact that there are more billboards and advertisements for malt liquor and cigarettes in predominantly African American neighborhoods and that the majority of offenders serving time for drug possession and sales are African American. But the victims of early racist opinion concerning opiate addiction were not African American but Chinese.
Opium Addiction and Racist Misconceptions
Because opium had been a part of Chinese culture for many years, it was easy for those who wanted to denigrate opium addicts to use racist misconceptions associated with Chinese immigrants to America to do the job on a large scale. Although opium smoking had not had any negative impact on society, stories first published by William Randolph Hearst, a notorious publisher of falsifications, described how women were seduced with opium by Chinese immigrants and how they were stealing jobs from American citizens.
Not only was this propaganda racial in nature, but it turned public opinion against opiates and helped to begin the long crusade against opiates and other drugs. Due in part to Hearst’s racist articles, Congress imposed taxes on both opium and morphine. Once opium started to be controlled, withdrawal symptoms ran rampant throughout the communities that used it, which in turn brought more negative attention to the drug because people blamed the negative symptoms on the drug instead of on the fact that people were going through withdrawal from it. Congress then passed an act that made the prescription of opium illegal without first registering and paying a tax.
The Stereotype of Opiate Addicts and Racism
With these seemingly (on the surface, anyway) noble acts, the stage was set for the stereotype of the drug addict to be born. The targeted race has changed, but the racism inherent to the so-called War on Drugs makes it something of a witch hunt. With little distinction given to drugs used for medicinal or recreational purposes, the public’s negative opinion of drugs was set and continues today.
The negative stereotype of a drug addict was intermixed with racism at the start; do you think it’s still that way, or has it become multi-cultural?



