Pubdate: Thu, 15 Jun 2000 Source: Illinois Times (IL) Copyright: 2000 Yesse Communications Contact: PO Box 3524 Springfield, IL 62708 Fax: 217/753-2281 Author: Rich Miller Note: Rich Miller also publishes Capitol Fax, a daily political newsletter. He can be reached at www.capitolfax.com ECSTASY IN THE STATEHOUSE It was a politician's dream come true. House Republican leader Lee Daniels held a press conference earlier this month calling for a drastic increase in penalties for selling the drug "Ecstasy." Daniels wanted to make the sale of a relatively small amount of the drug a Class X felony, which includes a mandatory six to thirty-year prison sentence without the chance of probation. Time magazine did a big cover story on the drug just days before, so the press conference received wide coverage in the media. Daniel's spokesman said on the day of the event that his office was flooded with calls from reporters and local state's attorneys, who were particularly exited about the proposal. Many parents of teenagers, particularly suburban parents, are worried about the drug's rapid spread through the youth culture. Those parents happen to belong to one of the most intensely courted demographics in politics today (mainly because they once voted Republican, then switched to Bill Clinton, and were eventually repulsed during the Monica Lewinski scandal). Politically speaking, this is obviously a major positive for Daniels without any downside. His politically vulnerable members and the challengers he's backing can all use the proposal to their advantage in the November elections. But, according to that Time's article the drug's dangers don't really match the intense hype it's getting these days. Ecstasy, according to the magazine, isn't particularly toxic. A user would have to take fourteen times the normal (six-hour "high") dosage of pure Ecstasy before they'd die. Daniels compared it to LSD, but Time specifically pointed out that the drug doesn't cause hallucinations. It's been used by a small number of psycho-therapists to treat various maladies. According to Time, the drug makes people "feel peaceful, empathetic and energetic - not edgy, just clear." It's also not addictive. There are real dangers. Many users take Ecstasy at dance parties, or "raves." If you dance like a nut and don't drink water the drug can make you overheat to the point where your blood coagulates. Time reported that dozens of people have died that way. The other major danger, according to Time, is not from Ecstasy, but from "look-alike" pills. The government doesn't regulate drug dealers, of course, so lots of them will sell other stuff and claim it's Ecstasy. Some of those chemicals can be extremely dangerous. Then there's the memory loss and the depression that some users experience after the drug wears off. No doubt about it, Daniel's bill will pass. The hype is just too fierce and the politics are just too good. I would bet money that there will be almost no debate before it flies out of both legislative chambers and is signed into law. Legislators are not going to stand up for the rights of drug dealers. Daniel's legislation doesn't target casual users, so the white suburban youth children of that all-important demographic are probably safe from jail, which might ruin their futures a lot more than minor experimentations that don't go awry. (If Al Gore and George W. Bush had been arrested for just one of their multitudinous "youthful indiscretions" we'd have two completely different presidential candidates right now.) But there is a big problem with this bill. Daniels wants to give the Department of Public Health the authority to impose Class X felonies on "designer drugs" as soon as they are invented, without any sort of legislative action. That means the debate over incarceration versus prevention is completely over, which may be fine with the majority but is no way to run a railroad. I don't want any kids getting the wrong idea if by slight chance they happen to read this column. DON"T DO IT! Live long lives and prosper. Stay away from drugs, alcohol, and tobacco. The daughter of a friend of mine dabbled with all sorts of drugs and recently died from an accidental heroin overdose. The pain of her loss is still unbearable. Please don't do that to yourself, your family and your friends. Adults in a free society, however, have the duty to debate these issues. Handing over law-making authority to an unelected bureaucracy is probably a politically popular move but it's just one more in a long line of erosions of constitutional rights and separation of powers in the name of a drug war. That has caused a phenomenal increase in incarcerations without a correspondingly huge decrease in drug usage. We need more debate, not less. - --- MAP posted-by: Allan Wilkinson