Pubdate: Wed, 21 Jun 2000 Source: Arizona Daily Star (AZ) Copyright: 2000 Pulitzer Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.azstarnet.com/ Author: Jim Beattie Bookmark: MAP's link to Arizona articles is: http://www.mapinc.org/states/az DEVELOP SENSIBLE DRUG POLICY I recently received a newsletter in the mail from the Pima County Sheriff's Department, called "Community Connection." It dealt with an initiative slated for the November ballot, called "The Drug Initiative 2000," which makes the use of marijuana more of a personal or medical issue, rather than a law enforcement issue. The focus of the newsletter was to offer blatant propaganda against this rational initiative. I am displeased my tax money is being used in this politically motivated propaganda campaign. What gives the Sheriff's Department the right to spend our money in this fashion? Why do legislators and law enforcement officials believe they are better able to make medical decisions related to drug prescribing than doctors? Why should someone who will benefit from the medical use of marijuana suffer on account of some uneducated lawmaker's "tough-on-crime" posturing? I am in favor of any initiative that would decriminalize marijuana, which is far less harmful than "legal" drugs, like alcohol and tobacco. Most illegal drugs need to be decriminalized. Incarcerating for possession and sale of drugs is costing this country billions of dollars annually, yet street drugs are every bit as available as they ever were. Drug use or drug addiction is simply a vice, not a crime. A society cannot effectively legislate against a vice. America's 80-year attempt to control drugs (since the Harrison Narcotics Act of 1916) has failed in every respect, other than to promote a huge, multi-billion dollar "Prison Industrial Complex" and visit untold misery upon inmates and their families. Drug use has to be dealt with, but a policy needs to be developed that is not based on hysteria (what we currently have), but upon sound medical and sociological research. Jim Beattie - --- MAP posted-by: Eric Ernst