Pubdate: Sun, 28 Jan 2001 Source: Detroit News (MI) Copyright: 2001, The Detroit News Contact: http://data.detnews.com:8081/feedback/ Website: http://www.detnews.com/ Author: Nolan Finley Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/traffic.htm (Traffic) WE'RE FIGHTING A LOSING WAR ON DRUGS; IT'S TIME TO RETHINK POLICY It's hard to watch Steven Soderbergh's excellent new movie, Traffic, and not conclude that America's relentless war on drugs is being waged on our own families, on ourselves. And we're losing. The harder we fight to keep illegal drugs off our streets and out of our children, the more we fail. Donald Rumsfeld, the new secretary of defense, said much the same thing during his Senate confirmation hearing, suggesting a better strategy would be for America to focus the nearly $75 billion a year it spends to battle drugs on curbing demand, rather than stopping supply. Although this newspaper hasn't taken a position, a growing number of conservatives from Rumsfeld to William F. Buckley Jr. to the Cato Institute have concluded that attacking demand is the only sensible approach. The drug war is a failure, what former Baltimore Mayor Kurt Schmoke aptly called "our domestic Vietnam," a hopelessly unwinnable fight, and yet one we find impossible to surrender. It has not achieved a drug-free society, but rather has jammed our prisons with petty dope dealers and users; turned our cities into combat zones, and led to drastic increases in homicides and property crime. Meanwhile, in the name of eradicating drug use, we've passively surrendered the civil liberties we're supposed to cherish. About 80 percent of American companies now require mandatory drug tests for employees. You can be tested without cause, and fired or denied a job for what you do at home. Imagine the Framers' reaction to the idea of homes and cars being seized and sold by the government without conviction of a crime. Only about one-third of the drug budget goes to treatment, while the rest goes to combat trafficking. It's time to reverse that ratio. A 1994 study by the RAND Corp. found treatment is seven times more effective than law enforcement; 10 times more effective than efforts to intercept drugs, and 23 times more effective than fighting drugs at their source. But not all drug abusers want treatment, and not all users need treatment. Of the 70 million Americans who have tried marijuana, only about 5 million continue to use it regularly, or have gone on to other drugs. Treatment will have little impact on the occasional, recreational drug user. Nor will moralistic crusades like "Just Say No." Today's young people are better educated about drugs than any previous generation, and yet many still choose to use them. A more realistic approach would be decriminalization of certain drug use, starting with marijuana. Follow that with a very serious national discussion on how to remove the criminal networks from the production and distribution of drugs. That doesn't mean creating a federal pharmacy for junkies, but recognizing that drug abuse is a public health problem and not a crime problem. Obviously, the down side to ending the drug war is an increase in drug use. How great that increase would be is debateable; users don't seem to have much trouble getting their dope today. In the closing scene of Traffic, the hero relaxes on a baseball diamond built in his Mexican town with money squeezed from federal drug agents. His dream: freeing his home from the clutches of drug traffickers and making it again a place where children can play without fear. The best hope of realizing that dream is to declare a long overdue truce in the drug war. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D