Pubdate: Thu, 31 Aug 2000 Source: Hickory Daily Record (NC) Copyright: 2000 Hickory Daily Record Contact: PO Box 968, Hickory, N.C. 28603 Feedback: http://www.hickoryrecord.com/letter.html Website: http://www.hickoryrecord.com/ SNORT COKE, KILL PEOPLE Let young Americans considering a cocaine habit consider the consequences. Most crackheads couldn't find Colombia on a map, but if someone could show them the consequences of their addiction there, would they think twice? Not likely. After all, these people are destroying themselves, and their families. Still, the effect is real. Colombia, which is about to receive more than a billion dollars of U.S. taxpayer money to wipe out the cocaine trade there, provides about 80 percent of the world's coke. Americans aren't the only abusers, but dust bowls of Colombian coke fly up the nostrils of Americans every day. Those Americans may think they're just having fun with their harmless vice. The truth is, they are playing a role in the deaths of human beings. And that's not just the pusher who was gunned down the other day in a drive-by. We're talking about the tens of thousands of people who have died in the past few decades in Colombia. To be sure, the war there is about more than drugs. The last significant Marxist insurgency is ripping apart that nation. But the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, which controls large portions of southern Colombia, couldn't go on for long without profits from the drug trade. And that drug trade would fizzle out if demand from the United States weren't so high. How high? The Drug Enforcement Administration estimates that 3.8 million Americans over age 12 use the drug. The DEA thinks some 1.75 million use it at least once a month. The market has shrunk greatly since 1982, the year of peak cocaine use in the United States. Then, about 10.4 million Americans used cocaine. The shrinkage is reason to celebrate. But 3.8 million people using anything is a large market, one that someone will supply illegally or legally, from Colombia or elsewhere. The market economy cares nothing for laws. It is an amoral force. If you want it, I'll get it for you. It's as simple as that. Colombia's drug lords aren't poisoning Americans. They aren't forcing Americans to do anything. American drug abusers are poisoning themselves, and the drug barons and communist guerrillas are more than happy to provide the poison. The addicted crackhead may have a tough time caring about anyone, much less himself. But drug haters should use President Clinton's visit to Colombia this week, and the $1.3 billion we're sending to that country, to make a point about drugs. Let impressionable minds -- the minds of our young people -- know that there is a direct correlation between drug abusers in this country and the suffering people of Colombia. Let them know that the chain of woe that starts with each snort of cocaine does not stop at the user, or his family, or even his community. It stretches to the far-flung jungles of a war-torn country. Let them know -- before they get hooked. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake