Pubdate: Wed, 20 Sep 2000 Source: The Springfield News-Leader (MO) Website: http://www.springfieldnews-leader.com/ Address: 651 Boonville, Springfield, Missouri 65806 Contact: http://www.springfieldnews-leader.com/opinions/index.html Copyright: 2000 The Springfield News-Leader Author: Gary Presley, Aurora, is a free-lance writer. WAR ON DRUGS REPEATS MISTAKES OF PROHIBITION Over the past few years, a good portion of our national treasury has gone up the noses of social malcontents and into the pockets of the South American drug lords. President Clinton apparently believes that’s not enough. Reporting in the New York Post on Clinton’s summer trip to Colombia, Sidney Zion writes, “Worse than drug addiction is the addiction of our politicians to the War on Drugs. Undeterred, Bill Clinton this week arrived in Colombia with a billion in hard cash and a promise to exhale the Cali cartel that ‘subverts Colombian democracy and poisons American children.’” Clinton is not alone in his quest to tilt at this particular windmill. Mel Carnahan and John Ashcroft busily blame one another for Missouri being the so-called “Meth Capital,” each eager to cast an “aye” vote when Congress next decides to pour more money down this particular rat hole. Do any of these people remember Prohibition, the experiment that turned half the nation into scofflaws and established organized crime as a major force in American society? Prohibition didn’t work, but we didn’t learn. We decided to name it the “war on drugs” and try again. Wait. Maybe we did learn something. We no longer punish alcohol possession, minors excepted. We punish alcohol-induced misbehavior and view chronic misuse as a disease. Why don’t we treat other chemical addictions and abuse in the same manner? People seek drugs to cope with spiritual, emotional or physical problems. That makes drug abuse a problem for a pastor, a counselor or a physician. If a drug abuser refuses to ask for help, we should care only about their behavior during their voyage to personal destruction. We have nothing to show for the war on drugs but more addiction than ever, a legal system clogged with drug-related cases, and graft and corruption that eat away at our moral foundation. We have politicians who take our tax dollars and send our legal system on a mad pursuit where private property can be confiscated without due process and courts intervene to forbid the medicinal use of marijuana. My idea is hardly original. Former Baltimore Mayor Kurt Schmoke first spoke out years ago. Since then, William F. Buckley Jr. and George Bushnell, former president of the American Bar Association, among others, have suggested some sort of decriminalization process. Drug abuse, alcohol or otherwise, is best left to physicians and other medical professionals. Prohibition taught us that. The War on Drugs repeats the lesson. - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck