Pubdate: Sun, 12 Mar 2000 Source: Journal Gazette (IN) Copyright: 2000 Journal Gazette Address: 600 W. Main Street, Ft. Wayne, IN. 46802 Fax: (219) 461-8648 Contact: http://www.jg.net/jg/emailform2.htm Author: Ken Bisson IT'S TIME AMERICA ENDS THE FUTILE WAR ON DRUGS Imagine an end to the bloodshed. No more gang warfare. No more drive-by shootings. Imagine an end to the corruption of police and judges with black market bribes. Imagine American teens freed from the lure of "easy money" gained by illicit trafficking. Seventy years ago those possibilities were only beginning to be imagined. Until those benefits could be widely envisioned by the U.S. public, America's failed experiment with the "War on Alcohol" raged on. Once those benefits were fully understood, Prohibition was repealed and America finally enjoyed those advantages. This country's mothers led the efforts to try to rid America of the problems of alcohol abuse by calling for Prohibition. In 1932, those same mothers were leading the call to end Prohibition. "Give us back our sons" (too often lured into lucrative bootlegging) was their cry. Today's generation has followed the path of that tragedy known as Prohibition, with identical results. Alarmed by the problems created by drug abuse, our generation started our "War on Drugs." Alas, it is no more possible to eliminate drugs now than it was to eliminate alcohol then. Attempting to do so creates even larger problems. Just as in the '30s, drug prohibition fuels huge profits for those who traffic in the illicit substances. Those massive cash flows draw marginal citizens into the criminal activity. That money "empowers" the idle youth lured into crime, tempts police and then corrupts judges. Battles over turf spew collateral damage on all of society. Legalizing alcohol did not put an end to alcohol abuse. It did return the production and distribution of alcohol to competing private, accountable enterprises. The huge profits and violence spawned by Prohibition waned. Similarly, ending drug prohibition will not put an end to drug abuse. But it will return the production and distribution of (now illicit) drugs to competing pharmaceutical companies. The huge profits and violence spawned by the illicit trafficking will wane. Libertarians hold that individuals must be held accountable for their actions, whether or not substance abuse is involved. We find no reason to imprison an addict seeking help simply for being an addict. Today's "drug warriors" in Congress pass laws that put addicts in prisons (where drug abuse is rampant). Addictions are medical problems. Ending our drug prohibition will permit us to address addiction appropriately. Real reductions in drug abuse result from accurate educational information. Educational efforts and drug treatment efforts are being thwarted by our current drug laws. Imagine keeping molesters, rapists and murderers behind bars instead of paroling them to vacate their cells for one more pot smuggler. Imagine cutting the economic legs out from under the drug lords by ending our drug war. Imagine our scarce police and judicial resources devoted to pursuing the non-drug crimes we all face. These are the benefits that await America once we repeal our prohibition. Libertarians understand, as did the mothers who called for an end to alcohol prohibition, that prohibition laws have created inevitably greater problems for society. Once the American public can imagine these benefits, our "war on drugs" nightmare will be ended. - --- MAP posted-by: Allan Wilkinson