Pubdate: Mon, 19 Aug 2002 Source: North County Times (CA) Contact: 2002 North County Times Website: http://www.nctimes.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1080 Author: Andrew Kleske, online editor for the North County Times. Related: http://www.nctimes.net/news/2002/20020818/11111.html ALL OUR MONEY UP IN SMOKE I have more than a few pet peeves. In fact, I'm something of a Humane Society for peeves. Waste would have to be one of the largest breeds I keep kenneled, along with hypocrisy. When one gets a mutt of both, that's a pet no one wants to adopt. Yet we see examples of it everywhere. For me the war on drugs always has been an offspring of waste and hypocrisy, as we spend billions of tax dollars to see few results in stemming the flow of illegal substances across our borders and through our streets. Our kids can buy drugs as easily as they can obtain alcohol or cigarettes, and without paying sales taxes. Every high-profile drug bust the nation's law enforcement officials hold up before the TV cameras represents an exponentially greater amount of contraband that flows unnoticed and uncontrolled. A much smaller peeve, something in the Mexican hairless or Teacup Poodle category, is having to look at the power and cable lines that criss-cross my neighborhood. I've complained about them as being unsightly and dangerous for years. We've all paid fees to have them buried, only to see the money that was collected evaporate in public-private back-room deals. Nine cables run in front of my home, just waiting to be knocked into the sun-dried canyon below, and I am powerless to demand mitigation. Never did I imagine these two distinctly different pet peeves could sire an offspring. But on July 29, when a National Guard helicopter searching for marijuana snapped an East County power line, a very expensive problem was born with the name The Pines Fire. With more than 60,000 acres burned and the destruction of 37 homes, 116 outbuildings and 169 vehicles, the fire took an enormous toll. The $30 million spent to extinguish the conflagration and the millions of dollars in property losses do not begin to account for the total damage. As East County burned, I doubt a single pot-head was left wanting, as the supply springs from the ground in a million other places throughout the state. Any money spent trying to stop the marijuana supply quite literally goes up in smoke and will always do so. Prohibition in the 1920s proved that efforts to end the use of a product that is generally accepted by the public as benign will fail. It merely delivers customers into the hands of corruption, lines the pockets of crooks and costs taxpayers a fortune in enforcement and incarceration costs. Imagine how much further that money would go toward educating youth about the dangers of smoking anything, whether it be marijuana, crack or tobacco. Imagine how far that money could go toward battling the truly dangerous and addictive drugs and to treat those who have fallen for them. As for power lines, the county and state are covered with an overhead maze of similar accidents waiting to happen. If an accident can cause such damage, consider what could result from intentional, orchestrated attacks on these lines. The drug issue is too emotionally and politically heated to expect a quick resolution of the obvious flaws in our strategy. In the meantime, I'd settle for burying the power lines. At least that would be one pet peeve properly paper-trained. - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk