Pubdate: Thu, 03 May 2001 Source: Times Record News (TX) Copyright: 2001 The E.W. Scripps Co. Contact: http://www.trnonline.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/995 WAR-WEARY AMERICANS NOT SO SURE CURRENT DRUG POLICIES WINNING THE WAR It's our longest war. And it's probably our most expensive, although accurate figures aren't available on the actual number of victims or the cost of collateral damage. The war on drugs has all the earmarks of a quagmire, the combat taking place in Colombia with U.S. tax dollars, weapons and troops having all the earmarks of a quagmire within a quagmire. And after more than 30 years, Americans seem to be worn out by it. That's the conclusion drawn by those who recently polled U.S. adults to find out their attitudes about the drug war and whether they thought it was winnable. Nearly three-quarters of those surveyed by the Pew Research Center for the People & the Press said that "demand is so high we will never stop drug use," and the same percentage said that this country is on the losing end of the war against drugs, according to a report on the survey published recently in The Washington Post and written by Richard Morin. The survey authors compared the results from this most recent poll with results from a similar poll conducted about 10 years ago, and the differences in public opinion are profound. Ten years ago, Americans still wanted to get tough on everyone involved in the drug trade - the users, the sellers and the suppliers. Ten years later, after a record boom in the prison industry fueled by the get-tough policies adopted on drugs, we're not so sure that public-policy measures will succeed. Perhaps we've learned from the failure of the get-tough, throw-money-at-it approach that's been taken by every administration since the late '60s. In fact, according to the poll, Americans today aren't ready to put much faith in public policies to deal with the problem anyway. About 80 percent of those polled blamed peer pressure and bad parents for drug use among teens, a recognition that you can pass all the laws in the world and build all the prisons money can buy but laws won't work until and unless they have universal support. When offered solutions by the pollsters, those surveyed weren't sure what to do about the problem at this juncture. They're wary of the Colombian coca crackdown. They're unsure government programs work. And they're not even certain any more that illegal drugs constitute a major problem. The number who say it's the No. 1 problem facing the country is down drastically from a decade ago, at the height of the crack epidemic. The obvious question from a public-policy standpoint is, Where do we go from here? The new administration in Washington claims not to be as poll-driven as the previous one, which is not necessarily a bad thing. However, this poll has results that represent a significant shift in public opinion, a shift not obviously swayed one way or the other by a structured campaign from any side. So these results ought to get some attention in the halls of a government that still treats the drug war as if it were the most pressing issue facing the nation. Perhaps it truly is time to look for solutions other than the ones that have been tried and that have failed. A changing of the guard provides a good opportunity to reassess our priorities and review how we're doing. Meanwhile, although Americans may be disillusioned by our inability to deal effectively with the supply and demand for drugs we cannot stop paying attention to how our elected and appointed officials deal with those issues, because that's our money they're spending and it's the lives of our loved ones that are at risk. War-weary or not, we have a stake in how the war is conducted. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart