Pubdate: Thu, 16 Nov 2000 Source: The Press of Atlantic City (NJ) Copyright: 2000 South Jersey Publishing Co. Contact: 11 Devins Lane, Pleasantville NJ 08232 Website: http://www.pressplus.com/ Author: Dr. Steven Fenichel Note: Dr. Fenichel practices in Absecon & is a member of Physicians for Social Responsibility. WHAT IT MEANS TO BE AN AMERICAN What it means to be an American is a question that needs contemplation by all of its citizens. The dream of America is becoming trivialized by the harsh reality. Everything comes down to money, and the more you have, the greater your influence - from the White House to the Statehouse and everything in between. Children are taught that America is a land of freedom where people may pursue life, liberty and happiness. How does this myth square with the reality that America incarcerates more people per capita than any nation in the world? Another myth: America is a land of religious freedom and tolerance. From different religious traditions emerges a rich tapestry of different moral values. If an individual chooses to live by a certain set of moral values that doesn't physically harm another's property or person, that is his or her right. However, if a group imposes its religious/moral values on people not sharing these values, the results are clearly seen through history: the Holy Crusade, the Inquisition, the Salem witch trials, Nazi Germany and America's Drug War. The big myth used in all morality crusades: Law enforcement is to protect people from being harmed by others. Reality shows the vast majority of police resources are used not in protecting the individual from others, but from themselves. Seventy percent of our prison population - nearly 1.5 million people - are there for consensual acts that should never have been criminalized. America's obsession since the disintegration of Russia's evil empire is illegal drugs. The private nature of selling and using drugs has led law enforcement to resort to methods of detection and surveillance that intrude on our privacy, including illegal search, eavesdropping, entrapment, etc. The myth of the Constitution and its Bill of Rights protections comes up hard against the reality of criminalizing consensual acts. Successful prosecution of these cases often requires police infringement of constitutional protections that safeguard individual privacy. Indeed, as Orson Welles stated: Only in a police state, is the job of a policeman easy. As a physician, I have a front-row seat on this drug war. I personally know patients with chronic pain, muscle spasms, seizures, nausea, vomiting and appetite loss who get consistent relief from cannabis sativa, or marijuana. But it is illegal, and I cannot prescribe this medicine for them. Several have spent time in prison, including a 51-year-old women with end-stage multiple sclerosis. This woman and her husband are model citizens, yet this society views them as criminal. On the other hand, I have patients, especially the elderly, who cannot afford basic prescriptions. Where is law enforcement in controlling the criminal extortion by the pharmaceutical industry? Recently I telephoned both Atlantic and Cape May County prosecutors to challenge them to take part in a public forum in which they could defend the drug-war policy they so zealously prosecute. The drug-sting operation orchestrated by the Cape May County prosecutor, in which police arrested people for attempting to buy drugs from them, only serves to give the public a false sense of security and political grandstanding points for himself. The Atlantic County prosecutor recently hosted a radio talk show discussing the rightness of his drug-warrior ways. Neither man has the courage of his convictions to meet in a public forum to truly debate and educate the citizens they supposedly serve. Both prosecutors told me that if there is concern about the law, meet with the lawmakers. Assemblymen and state senators have not responded to my many phone calls and letters. Who is taking care of the people? Andre Gide, a French writer, gives me the best insight to the drug warriors: "The true hypocrite is the one who ceases to perceive his deception, the one who lies with sincerity." They have told themselves so many rational lies about their deception, that they deceive even themselves. Those who lose track of their hypocrisy, especially who begin to consider it virtuous, are the most dangerous hypocrites of all. Alas, when it comes to consensual crimes, they are the most prevalent form. - --- MAP posted-by: GD