Pubdate: Tue, 13 Mar 2001
Source: Daily Independent (CA)
Copyright: 2001 - The Daily Independent
Contact:  http://www.ridgecrestca.com/
Author: Mimi Merrill
Note: Mimi Merrill is a Ridgecrest writer, teacher and longtime liberal 
activist.

WAR ON DRUGS IS A LOSING PROPOSITION FOR U.S.

Does anyone - save for those whose livelihoods are dependent upon its 
continuance - believe we should be "fighting" a "war" on drugs?

In the name of that "war," we American citizens have already given up 
countless liberties, and in its name we have supported totalitarian 
governments worldwide.

In a mid-February Daily Independent editorial about the Taliban religious 
militia having virtually wiped out Afghanistan's opium poppy fields in less 
than a year, the Editor said that "one could argue - successfully -that a 
Taliban-like approach would not be possible in a free country." I would 
have preferred to have seen the phrase "not be possible" replaced with 
"would be abhorrent."

Let's talk a bit about that Taliban approach.

A subtle error crept into the editorial, the claim that the Taliban 
religious militia merely threatened to jail farmers who grew opium poppies. 
No. The AP story clearly stated that not only did the Taliban burn the 
heroin laboratories, but that they jailed farmers "until they agreed to 
destroy their poppy crops."

Well, what's wrong with that?

I am reminded of the admiration many Americans accorded several despots in 
the pre-World War II era. Hey! Mussolini must be doing something right! 
Why, he made the trains in Italy run on time! Hitler? Well, if Charles 
LIndbergh approves of him, he can't be all bad. Besides, he's solved the 
problem of those terrible Jews. Got rid of that problem, didn't he?

Back to the Taliban. If you were thinking those farmers went to anything 
like a Ridgecrest jail with a couple of Ridgecrest's finest manning the 
locked doors while the arrested farmers awaited the arrival of their 
attorney, think again. This is the same Taliban whose New York office was 
recently closed by our State Department.

The direct cause of that closing was a U.N. Security Council resolution, 
fueled by the Taliban's giving sanctuary to the terrorist Osama bin Laden. 
Yes, the Osama bin Laden who has a U.S. warrant out for his arrest. 
Terrorists shield terrorists.

The Taliban is the same extremist militia group that captured the capital 
city of Afghanistan in 1986, and unilaterally declared an end to women's 
basic human rights, an abomination that exists today.

Women have been banned from work and school and have only restricted access 
to medical treatment. In addition, they are required to completely cover 
their bodies with a burqa with only a mesh covering over their eyes through 
which to see.

Punishment for breaking these draconian decrees includes beatings, stoning, 
and death. Women have been beaten for even lifting their burqa for a few 
moments to breathe fresh air.

The Taliban's cruel regime, a drought, a severe winter, and continued 
fighting have combined to create a humanitarian nightmare for Afghan women.

Fine. Let's rejoice that the heroin that eventually ends up in the minds 
and bodies and blood of all too many Americans won't come past our borders 
in as great quantity from those fields this year. But let's not fool 
ourselves how that came about.

The threats to the jailed farmers that persuaded them to destroy their 
poppy crops were made by a religious militia that does not hesitate to beat 
and stone and kill those it jails.

The U.N. surveyors found "barely an acre here and there." True, not many 
poppies were planted this season. However, the AP story quotes a State 
Department official's rational evaluation - the poppy crop has decreased. 
It has not been eliminated.

And next season? With the insatiable appetite of the U.S. for drugs, what 
isn't planted in Afghanistan will find a field elsewhere.

We're talking money crops in poverty-stricken countries, remember? We're 
talking a by-now-well-established wealthy gangster class we created by our 
forgetting the lessons of Prohibition.

In the early part of this century, China bragged about total destruction of 
the poppy crop. That was in the days before our insanely named "war on 
drugs," a war that has created a "drug czar" in a supposed democracy, a war 
against our citizens, a war that has filled our jails.

The "war" metaphor is an unfortunate misnomer. We don't fight drugs in this 
country. We fight drug users. Let's declare peace.

California made a start by deciding to treat users instead of punishing 
them. But the U.S. Government still wants to punish instead of treating the 
illness.

We have created a bureaucratic superstructure whose very existence depends 
upon the continuation of a "war" on drugs to keep it healthy.

Does anyone really believe that the destruction of 175,000 acres of poppies 
by a totalitarian militia will make a difference on the streets of New York 
or Los Angeles? Or Ridgecrest?

The traffic in drugs continues and grows. Let's say the Taliban prevail, 
they wipe out poppy production, and other countries follow suit.

Have you heard about the new designer drugs that are not dependent on poppy 
fields? What a relief to the drug Czar and to the prison industry - 
business as usual after all.
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