Pubdate: Sat, 01 Jul 2000 Source: Liberty Magazine (US) Copyright: 2000 Liberty Foundation Contact: Box 1118, Port Townsend, WA 98368 Website: http://www.libertysoft.com/liberty/index.html Author: David A. Nichols THE PRINCIPAL OF THE THING Margaret Loder-Healy was the principal of Memorial Elementary School in Newton, New Hampshire. She was noted for her part in making that small town's school into New Hampshire's best. She resigned her position in November of 1999. It seems she had a small problem. She had been a heroin addict for years -- years during which she substantially improved the school she was in charge of. To my way of thinking, her problem wasn't so much the heroin. Obviously, the use of that drug did not interfere with her ability to do her job and do it well. No, the problem was the present scheme of drug prohibition laws. They, not the heroin, caused her downfall. What if Loder-.Healy had been an alcoholic, not a heroin user? Suppose she was one of those millions of alcoholics we are surrounded by every day, in every walk of life (including politicians, prosecutors, judges, and the police), and hardly notice -- the ones who "nip" from the bottle all day long and go home to several stiff drinks in the evening. Could Margaret still have done as good a job as school principal then? I'm not sure. Perhaps. Or, perhaps not. Different drugs affect different people in different ways. But here is the important question: Would you choose a good principal who was known to have a alcohol problem over an excellent principal who was addicted to heroin -- assuming there were no laws in place to criminalize either drug choice? What I am sure of, is that Margaret would not have been arrested for federal alcohol possession charges, stemming from a police investigation into an alcohol ring. - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk