Pubdate: Mon, 3 Apr 2000 Source: Express, The (UK) Copyright: 2000 The Express Contact: +44-171-922-7794 Website: http://www.express.co.uk/ Forum: http://bbs.lineone.net/community/forums.html Author: Peter Hitchens NEW SOFT LINE ON DOPE WILL BRING US CRIME AND MISERY Millions of parents and their children have been betrayed this week by people who ought to know better. An apparently serious report from a grand-sounding body has urged that our anti-drug laws should be weakened rather than enforced. We have a serious epidemic of drunkenness among the young. The attempt to stamp out cigarettes has been a pitiful failure. Now this group of eminent citizens wants to make it easier for the next generation to fry their brains with dope and pills. The Government has rejected the report, but that does not mean it will not have an effect on chief constables and courts, as well as in all the homes where these issues are debated nightly. It should be ignored as the partisan rubbish it is. For the "Police Foundation", which produced the report, has no official connection with the police, as it confirmed to me this week. Its panel, far from being a sort of unofficial Royal Commission embracing all views, ruled out anyone who thinks that the use of illegal narcotics is immoral and wrong. Its chairman, the liberal Viscountess Runciman, was selected partly because she had "no association of any kind with any absolutist ideological or religious movement or position on the drugs issue". In other words, she was known to be open to the arguments of those who want the penalties against drugs softened. Members of her committee were selected on similar grounds. A spokesman for the foundation said they had to be "not wedded to any one pre-stated position on either extreme of the drugs debate". As far as this "Police Foundation" is concerned, it is "extreme" to believe that illegal drugs should remain illegal, and that the laws of England and Scotland should be rigorously upheld. In a letter to me, the foundation said: "We understand that you are arguing that the foundation and Lady Runciman failed to include a member with an acknowledged absolutist moral position on drug prohibition. This is true". Its report argues that the drug laws are not working, which is so. However, it is not toughness that has failed, but the very defeatism which we are being urged to continue. Ever since the Sixties, liberal courts and police forces have taken an ever more feeble line on punishing drug users. Serious enforcement of the law has not failed. It has been found to be difficult, and not tried. This is a stupid mistake. Cannabis, like all intoxicating drugs, weakens the brain's moral centre. So, at the same time as it creates a need for money to buy it, it makes users less fit for work and more likely to break the law. "Depenalisation" would increase burglary from homes and thefts from cars. The much-lauded relaxation of the law in Amsterdam produced a fourfold increase in cannabis use among teenagers and turned that city into Europe's crime capital, according to Dutch authorities. When Alaska decriminalised the drug, it had to reverse the decision because of the rise in crime and social problems. It is seriously dangerous to health. Regular use is more likely to result in devastating mouth, tongue and jaw cancers than smoking ordinary cigarettes. It can trigger schizophrenia where it is latent. It weakens the memory and produces paranoia. It lingers in the body for days, because it lodges in body fat. Post-mortems on truck and train drivers involved in fatal crashes in the US show an increasing number of them had been using cannabis. Would you want the driver of your child's bus to school, the surgeon who operates on you, the pilot of your holiday jet, the driver of a speeding fire engine, to have been smoking dope even two days before you put your future in their hands? The panel also wants to downgrade LSD and Ecstasy. Shop doorways and mental wards are peopled with those whose minds have been unhinged for ever by LSD. But we are only just beginning to discover the long-term damage Ecstasy can do to the brain. I predict an epidemic of mental illness and worse among the generation which has swallowed this chemical garbage. How can we tell our children it is a minor matter to play with their minds in this way? Would we let them go out and scar and smash their limbs for fun? Parents have lost far too much of their authority over their children. This report and its authors have weakened parents still further. If the great and the good say that dope and pills aren't seriously wrong, the argument will go, then why shouldn't we take them? As for the chorus which says that alcohol and tobacco are worse than cannabis, that may be so, and if they had just been invented, wise people would oppose them. But they are a part of our culture which cannot now be removed. How can this be an argument for welcoming a third danger into our midst? On the contrary, it is a warning that we have quite enough perils among us. In the ruined lives, the smashed families, the misery of crime, and in the stupefied, passive, loutish, criminal society that wide-scale semi-legal drug abuse will create, we shall see the fruits of this weak and lazy folly. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D