Pubdate: Mon, 21 Aug 2000 Source: Trenton Times, The (NJ) Copyright: 2000 The Times. Contact: http://www.njo.com/times/ Forum: http://forums.nj.com/ Author: Beth E. Fand QUAKERS OPPOSE U.S. DRUG 'WAR' America needs to end its war on people who use illegal drugs and, instead, invest in substance-abuse treatment, research and education, local Quakers say. Quakers in Trenton, Princeton, Mount Holly and Yardley, Pa., were part of a regional group that approved a statement opposing the country's drug policy during a March gathering in Philadelphia. On Aug. 1, the statement -- called a "minute" -- was read during the Shadow Convention in Philadelphia, a five-day alternative to the Republican National Convention. George Willoughby, a Deptford resident and a member of the Central Philadelphia Friends Meeting, said he and others conceived the Minute on Drug Concerns as a way of encouraging Quakers throughout the region to work to change U.S. drug policy. Now, he said, Philadelphia Quakers will visit their peers in Mount Holly and other communities to make a further call for action on the issue. "We have set out to educate and arouse and awaken the Quakers in this area to the whole problem so that they will look at it in light of the Quaker (principles) of peace, equality and relating to people as human beings, in love rather than punishment," Willoughby said. According to the Lindesmith Center-Drug Policy Foundation, one of the organizers of the Shadow Conventions held in Philadelphia and, last week, in Los Angeles, the federal and state governments will spend close to $40 billion this year fighting the drug war, which now has nearly 500,000 Americans behind bars. Despite the government's efforts, illicit drugs are cheap, available and potent, and 57 percent of the Americans who need drug treatment don't receive it, the center said. An analyst for the Office of National Drug Control Policy disagreed with some of those numbers, saying drug-use punishment and prevention costs will total about $30 billion this year, and that 300,000 people are imprisoned for drug-related offenses. He agreed that drugs have become cheaper and purer but said that is because demand for the substances has dropped. According to the analyst, the government no longer describes its fight against drug use as a war but as a means of solving a public health problem. But in their minute, the Quakers say the government's tactics "bear all the hallmarks of war: displaced populations, disrupted economies, terrorism, abandonment of hope by those the war is supposedly being fought to help, the use of military force, the curtailment of civil liberties and the demonizing of the `enemies.' " Victimized the most are "people of color, the poor and other less powerful persons," the Quakers said. That claim was echoed by the Rev. Jesse Jackson during the Shadow conventions, which also focused on poverty and a call for campaign-finance reform. "When the poor, the black, the brown are caught with drugs, it's called crime," the civil rights leader told a crowd of more than 500 people in Philadelphia. "When you're rich and inherit power, it's called youthful indiscretion. We demand one set of rules." In the minute, local Quakers call on their peers to seek ways to divert government money toward treatment, research and education on the dangers of drug use. They also ask Friends to "be mindful of ways in which our behavior and our speech support this war and the misuse of drugs." Friends in Mount Holly may take up that call. They have invited a member of the Central Philadelphia Meeting to speak to them next month about drug concerns, member Ed Dreby said. The Mount Holly Meeting decided to learn more about national drug policy after a member voiced concern about it during worship recently, Dreby said. In the past, Dreby said, another member had complained about "the perversity of our drug laws in driving criminal behavior and promoting violence." Dreby said he agrees that America's drug policy is hurting people. "The increasing criminalization of large proportions of our population, and the extent to which suburban whites get off but lower-income blacks get incarcerated -- that's just sick," he said. "The justice system, with regard to drug use, is at its most unjust." - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck