Pubdate: Sat, 12 May 2001 Source: South Florida Sun Sentinel (FL) Copyright: 2001 Sun-Sentinel Co & South Florida Interactive, Inc Contact: http://southflorida.sun-sentinel.com/services/letters_editor.htm Website: http://www.sun-sentinel.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1326 Author: Ginger Warbis, Lighthouse Point TRY OTHER TOOLS TO FIGHT DRUG WAR In your April 25 editorial, "Time to rethink anti-drug strategy," you state, "While fighting drugs is the right thing to do, it should not come at the expense of innocent lives." Missionary Roni Bowers and her infant daughter, Charity, are not the first innocent victims in this war. Though the U.S. media has largely ignored it, indigenous people throughout drug-producing and -trafficking regions have been killed and displaced by overt drug trade violence, and their food crops destroyed and children sickened and killed by U.S.-sponsored aerial fumigation for decades now. And these tragic stories are not limited to South America. Hardly a week passes in which the papers don't carry a paragraph describing yet another unarmed person shot dead by police on the street or in their own homes in the small hours of the night. After 30 years of it, we have no less addiction, no fewer overdoses and no less substance abuse than we had to begin with. In fact, we have more of all of those things. In addition, we have this whole raft of other problems that have nothing to do with these prohibited substances and everything to do with the black market that always accompanies prohibition. We're not fighting drugs. We're fighting people; our own people. When your only tool is a hammer, every problem looks like a nail. Force of law is a blunt force instrument, but it's not our only tool. Accurate, frank and honest information and dialogue are far more effective tools for dealing with a health problem. But we can't have that and prohibition, too. People who experience trouble with substance abuse and addiction can't even discuss it openly without confessing to a crime. No is just one word, folks. Not enough information there. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth