Pubdate: Fri, 02 Mar 2001 Source: Register-Guard, The (OR) Copyright: 2001 The Register-Guard Contact: PO Box 10188, Eugene, OR 97440-2188 Fax: (541) 338-2828 Website: http://www.registerguard.com/ Author: Jack Lange Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/traffic.htm (Traffic) DRUG WAR A FAILURE In our zeal to punish "sin," our drug war is a colossal failure yet we go on tilting its windmills. Just how ruinous a failure is graphic in the film "Traffic." The depicted corruption from the ghettos and barrios to the highest echelons of government in the grab for quick profit is but the tip of an iceberg menacing our democratic foundations. Yet less than a year ago, we launched another multibillion-dollar campaign in Colombia, racheting the war up another notch. Our prisons are filled with drug-related convictions, giving us the world's highest incarceration rate at more than 2 million. Many privacy rights have been sacrificed to the cause of eradication yet demand and supply stay constant. The movie confronts the question of which is the greater evil - the cops or the dealers, suppressors or suppliers. As the author of a novel on the subject, I applaud the movie makers and hope - as seems possible - it'll awaken us from our long sleep of delusion and bring change. My book, "Search For the Dragon," handles the subject satirically and with an even more definitive conclusion: the drug war itself as the cause of the mystique and the sustaining force for those engaged in the lucrative trade. Where the movie depicts the evil in a series of subplots on both sides of the U.S./Mexico border, the novel portrays it from the vantage of adventuring young Americans caught up in a pot-smuggling caper in Colombia. Either way, both the movie and the novel provide new views of the drug war debacle: The cure is sometimes worse than the habit and, often, the very cause of it. Jack Lange Florence - --- MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager