Pubdate: Sat, 25 Aug 2001 Source: Lima News (OH) Copyright: 2001 Freedom Newspapers Inc. Contact: http://www.limanews.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/990 DRUG POLICY DOOMED TO FAILURE The three-day U.S.-Mexico Border Summit at the University of Texas-Pan American in Edinburg, Texas, ended Friday. It's interesting to note what wasn't on the conference agenda. Missing from all the seminars on trade and business and health and the environment was any frank talk about the drug policies of either nation. They might not want to talk about it, but attendees at the border summit need to admit what more and more citizens of the United States and Mexico have concluded: The "war" on drugs is a failure. As much as they would like to, as much as they attempt to, politicians cannot end self-destructive behavior just by passing laws. Whether it's tobacco, alcohol or fatty foods, people will not stop consuming a substance just because it is harmful, or just because it is illegal. The United States sprays herbicides on Colombian jungles and production continues. Police tell schoolchildren to "Just say no" and demand continues. Governments pass laws, and the behavior continues. When faced with evidence of their failure, lawmakers and police think the solution is another law, one more program, some more money. It's time to stop this futile effort to save people from themselves. We need to find another way to reduce substance abuse, focusing on treatment and decriminalization instead of interdiction and punishment. And the United States can't tell other countries to do all the work. We're sure conference attendees from Mexico would agree: It's unfair for the United States to blame other countries for its drug problem when U.S. citizens provide the biggest market. Demand for substances the American government has declared illegal continues to increase. Despite what the drug warriors claim, this demand can't be stopped, any more than the demand for alcohol was stopped during American Prohibition from 1920 to 1933. The market for illegal drugs is so huge and so lucrative, it ends up financing gangs more powerful than some governments. In Matamoros, Mexico, this year, armed men stormed a police station and rescued one of their own who had been arrested by police. Later, the police commander and his assistant were murdered. Drug money has corrupted officials on both sides of the border. The present U.S. drug policy is unfair to its citizens. It has led to increased police harassment of minorities and harsher sentences against nonwhite defendants. It subjects people to searches at roadblocks, in airports and elsewhere - searches that are so far beyond unreasonable they are insane. It also has produced forfeiture laws that defy the Fourth Amendment and require owners to go to court to get their own property back from the police. Many times, the proceeds from these seizures go to fund the police agencies that took the goods or money in the first place. In the past, we called it "highway robbery." Now the term is "law enforcement." Officials must admit the "war" in its current form is not winnable. What do we mean by the "war on drugs," anyway? The whole concept of declaring war on an inanimate object is ridiculous. You can't defeat drugs' army. You can't occupy drugs' capital city. You can't force drugs to surrender. Now that the border summit is over, we hope attendees take that concept with them as they return home. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart