Pubdate: Sat, 02 Dec 2000 Source: Hobbs News-Sun (NM) Copyright: 2000 Hobbs News-Sun Contact: P.O. Box 850, Hobbs, NM 88240 Fax: (505) 393-5724 Website: http://www.hobbsnews.com/ Author: Ralph Damiani GOVERNOR AGAIN EMBARRASSES NEW MEXICO Just when you thought it was safe to go to the bookstore - well, sort of safe - our very own governor not only puts his foot in his mouth, he puts ours as well. In a press release from Playboy - yes, Playboy - we are told that Gov. Gary Johnson is the subject of the magazine's main question and answer article for January. While that alone may not be so bad, we don't think he learned history's lesson. President Carter did such an interview and look what happened to him. But we wonder if his choice of forums is the best idea. His pro-drug "crusade" has become something of a bad joke. The governor has toured the nation with his drug theory (at one point, it included legalizing heroin) after an off-hand remark of his caught fire. But if you look at his record, his actions do not follow his words. He has vetoed every bill that proposed drug-treatment programs. He opposed any changes in the way drug offenders are dealt with in the legal system. All this as treatment options become less and drug offenders in jail become more. Anyway, what is bad is that he used this new forum - if you will - to expound on the virtues of legalizing drugs, while never going into the flip side. He says things like smoking marijuana was kind of cool, drugs are not harmful to everybody, not all drug users are criminals, we have the right to make a free choice. That is true. We do have the right to choose. But the question is choose what? Society sets all kinds of limits. For example, it is a crime to commit suicide. Why? Is that not the ultimate "right." The answer is in terms of what kind of society do we want to be. If we make drugs legal, does that solve the problem of supply? If we are not prepared to give anyone, anywhere, at anytime, whatever drug they want, there will still be a black market - and thus crime - associated with drugs. And if you do this, then do we not have to give away alcohol? Tobacco? Is there a difference? Is that the kind of society we want to be? Legalized cocaine and opium did not work in Victorian England, and it will not work today. We hope we do not want a society where we tell our children it is all right to destroy our minds and our souls, something we must do if drugs are handed out like candy. Of course the pro-drug people say that will not happen. But if we are not prepared to just give the stuff on demand, then making cocaine and heroin legal will solve nothing. The effort against drugs is a hard and costly one. But at its core is the question of just who we want to be. And we believe it is not a society where our children will be allowed to go to opium dens. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth