Pubdate: Thu, 16 Mar 2000 Source: Providence Journal, The (RI) Copyright: 2000 The Providence Journal Company Contact: 75 Fountain St., Providence RI 02902 Website: http://www.projo.com/ Author: Linda Borg Bookmark: MAP's link to Rhode Island articles is: http://www.mapinc.org/states/ri DRUG CZAR TARGETS ABUSE MYTHS Using a blunt approach, Barry R. McCaffrey tells college and high school students that the "drug war" metaphor is inaccurate, and prevention is the solution. PROVIDENCE -- The question was just the sort of no-nonsense query you would expect from a thoughtful college student: How can marijuana be illegal when alcohol isn't? Barry R. McCaffrey, the White House drug czar and former four-star Army general, answered with a directness that was refreshing. "I don't share that view, but it is a legitimate topic for debate," he told 200 Providence College students yesterday. "If you are some 40-year-old guy smoking pot in a hut in Oregon and writing a book, I don't care what you do." That got their attention. Then McCaffrey shifted seamlessly into his antidrug spiel: that marijuana is dangerous and carcinogenic. That too many children get into enormous trouble because of their dependence on marijuana. But McCaffrey didn't stop there. Alcohol, he said, is the most abused drug in the United States. "Booze," he said with a voice that sounded like Jimmy Stewart, "is the biggest cause of crime." McCaffrey brought his antidrug crusade to Southern New England yesterday, where he spoke at the Fifth Annual Substance Abuse Roundtable in Taunton, Mass., followed by visits to Providence College and Barrington High School. For more than 30 years before his appointment in 1996 as director of the White House's National Drug Control Policy, McCaffrey had a career in the U.S. Army. He served four combat tours -- two in Vietnam -- and was commander in chief of the U.S. Armed Forces Southern Command before President Clinton called. When he retired, McCaffrey was the most highly decorated and the youngest four-star general in the Army. So McCaffrey speaks from experience when he says that the "war on drugs" is an inaccurate metaphor. Dealing with the problem of drugs is more akin to fighting cancer, he once said, because both call for patience, compassion and the will to carry on, despite setbacks. "If we are fighting a war, we're winning," said McCaffrey, a Taunton native, who asserted that drug use and drug-related deaths have declined by 50 percent since 1979. Still, 14 million people use illegal drugs a year, and 5 million of them are chronically addicted. At Providence College yesterday, McCaffrey spent a lot of time dispelling common myths about who abuses drugs: "Americans," he said, "like to believe they are black, brown, poor, crazy. I say, `Hold up the mirror.'" People who use drugs do so because of what it does to their brains, McCaffrey said. It has nothing to do with race or economic status. He said the only difference between a middle-class drug addict and a poor one is that the middle-income person can probably afford treatment. However, in both cases, their downward trajectory is certain unless they receive effective treatment. McCaffrey also predicted that methamphetamine, commonly known as speed, will become the drug of choice in the next decade. "It is the worst thing that can happen to America," he said. "These are drugs made by idiots in a hotel room. That's the future of drug use in our society." The solution is prevention, McCaffrey said, but you must start early and repeat your message to each new generation of elementary school children. By the time most teenagers are high school seniors, half have sampled an illegal drug. The key to successful intervention is to educate children at the community level, through programs like the Boys and Girls Clubs and the YMCA. - --- MAP posted-by: Eric Ernst