Pubdate: Tue, 07 Aug 2001 Source: St. Petersburg Times (FL) Copyright: 2001 St. Petersburg Times Contact: http://www.sptimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/419 Author: James R. McDonough, director, Florida Office of Drug Control, Tallahassee SOUND, BALANCED POLICY LESSENS ILLEGAL DRUG USE The St. Petersburg Times in its three-part series, U.S. versus them: Challenging America's War on Drugs (July 29-31) offered a skewed presentation of the facts to buttress the legitimacy of its "challenge." The reporter's message, despite the barrel of ink invested in it, can be reduced to the commonplace (but untrue) mantra: It's a war, the war has failed; and the war does more harm than the drugs. But facts are stubborn things, so let me point out a few. The efforts to lower drug abuse combine prevention, education, treatment and law enforcement. That is not a war, therefore, but a responsible and balanced policy. Nor are the counterdrug efforts failing. What the articles did not report is that since 1980, drug use in the United States has gone down from 14 percent to 6 percent of the population (a more than 50 percent decline), that cocaine users have dropped from 5.7-million to 1.7-million (about 70 percent) and that 90 percent of our children do not use drugs. In Florida, marijuana use among teens has gone down 36 percent, cocaine use has gone down 66 percent, and inhalant use has gone down 19 percent since 1995. Moreover, it is not the counterdrug policies that do the damage, but the drugs themselves. The lost lives, destroyed families, ruined health and social and economic degradation that drugs bring are tragic. The myth that our prisons are full of otherwise unoffending drug users is just that: a myth. Only 93 of the 70,000-plus inmates in Florida's prison system are there for marijuana possession, and each of them is a repeat offender with long rap sheets, which they plea bargained down. What a pity that the Times approached the U.S. data with a jaundiced attitude while embracing Swiss and Dutch data without hesitation, data that many dispute. Joseph Califano, for example, a former Cabinet official and currently the Director of the Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse at Columbia University states that the policy of decriminalizing cannabis has wreaked havoc on Dutch society. He maintains that decriminalizing has led to increased drug use (especially among children), increased crime and the rapid spread of HIV/AIDS. Dr. Robert DuPont, author of The Selfish Brain, a classic study of addiction, states that legalization of drugs would greatly increase the drug using population in the United States. Indeed, while drug use in America has been going down, drug use (and the crime that goes with it) in both Holland and Switzerland has been going up. Too bad the Times let its thesis get in front of its facts. But the fact remains that the American people reject illegal drug abuse (and drug experimentation) as a social norm. We have and can continue to lower drug abuse, but only with sound and balanced policy, not creative journalism. - -- James R. McDonough, director, Florida Office of Drug Control, Tallahassee - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom