Pubdate: Wed, 31 May 2000 Source: Columbia Daily Tribune (MO) Copyright: 2000 Columbia Daily Tribune Contact: 101 North 4th Street, P.O. Box 798 Columbia, MO 65205 Feedback: http://www.showmenews.com/forms/formletter.htm Website: http://www.showmenews.com/ Author: Henry J. Waters III, publisher, Columbia Daily Tribune SO WHAT'S NEW? Drug Crime And Crowded Jails We're so used to it that we hardly think about the vaunted but failed "war on drugs." News trickles out of Mexico detailing the latest gang-related killing spree or high-level official drug-money corruption. We hardly notice. News gushes out of the Boone County Government Building about an imminent tax increase to fund jail expansion. We gripe about the coming round of new taxes, but we don't spend much time thinking about why all this new lockup space is needed. We don't relate the war on drugs to our coming tax bite. Oh, now and then a small discussion erupts about our most devastating domestic social problem. The other day, federal drug czar Barry McCaffrey said we should rely more on treatment and less on incarceration for drug offenders. Local alternatives to jail are being tried with good success. The new drug court and the familiar Reality House are the most effective examples. Both substitute counseling and new-habit-forming exercises for jail time, and both are working quite well. But in order for such alternatives to be used energetically, we first must get over persistent preferences for incarceration, which, after all, is good old punishment. Treatment and rehabilitation seem more like help. Do miscreants deserve help? There's one thing we should know for sure by now: The military war on drugs does not work. Worse, it spawns most of the systematic crime that interferes with a peaceful and serene social existence. The war on drugs very effectively creates the black market that makes the price of otherwise cheap drugs expensive enough to warrant the killing, mayhem and stealing that drug lords and addicts commit. Drugs are about the only product left on Earth with enough profit built in to underwrite personal sales representatives calling on individual customers. Even insurance sales and service are now more automated. So, of course, we should end the war on drugs and see how much relief this brings to jail crowding. We would break the back of black-market crime overnight, just as we did with liquor Prohibition in the 1920s, and then we could concentrate only a small portion of the saved money on anti-use education and addiction treatment with salutary results. If we would treat drug use as a medical and not a criminal problem, the effect would be profound. We should try it. But do we have the corporate imagination to face up to the demagogues who want to "send a message?" Send the wrong message? Hell no! Let's spend a relative pittance, still a few billions, on the most moving kind of anti-drug use propaganda. Let's encourage parents to do their part. That's where drug use is headed off, not by the obviously failed attempt to cut off supply by military means. - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk