Pubdate: Wed, 18 Sep 2002 Source: Winston-Salem Journal (NC) Copyright: 2002 Piedmont Publishing Co. Inc. Contact: http://www.journalnow.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/504 Note: The Journal does not publish letters from writers outside its daily home delivery circulation area. Author: William Turner SOLDIER: WOMAN FIGHTING WAR ON DRUGS Last week's observations of the anniversary of the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks on America will be remembered by Toni Henderson, a disabled former nurse who has recently embarked on her own private war against the drug dealers who terrorize her East Greensboro neighborhood. For several weeks, Henderson, 53, has been walking up to drug dealers and giving them an easy-to-understand notice. Her message and mission, on a white piece of paper, read modestly and unpretentiously: "Crack selling will not be tolerated in this community." On Thursday, the day after most of the memorial programs, her home was set on fire. According to her story, carried by The Associated Press, police believe that the fire - which caused about $1,000 damage - was set on purpose, "likely by angry drug dealers." The scorched deck of her home means as much to her as the now sacred ground in Pennsylvania, where Flight 93 crashed last September. No doubt, Henderson rushed to fortify and protect the bedroom where her sick mother lay, just as the armed forces did when the Pentagon was hit by that hijacked jetliner. When her smoke detector blared, awakening her last Thursday morning, I am sure that she felt no less terrified than did her fellow citizens who were trapped, helplessly, when the alarms went off in the World Trade Center last year. Last week, President Bush vowed to ratchet up the war against global terrorism, saying again, that no matter the cost or how long it takes, "America will hunt them down and bring them to justice, one by one." In her neighborhood war, Henderson, apparently, has decided to conduct her own hunt, no matter the peril. She has vowed to stop the gunfire and the eerie late-night screaming she regularly hears, and to end the frequent sight of women selling their bodies in exchange for crack cocaine. She said: "There are certain things you risk your life for. I'd gotten to the point where I'd rather die than keep this up." To Henderson - and countless others like her across America - the toughs and thugs in her community are as big a threat as the Taliban. Relatively speaking, the drug dealers on America's streets are more dangerous than al-Quaida, since, for starters, no known religion drives their motives. It's all about money, sought primarily by people who have no means to earn a living in the above-ground economy. The untold billions of dollars made in drug deals in America partly finances the type of terrorism we're hearing mostly about these days. A little more than 20 years ago, President Reagan started a War on Drugs. That effort hasn't turned out to be a good scuffle. What the so-called War on Drugs did do - especially to those targeted in neighborhoods such as Henderson's - was fill up America's prisons and correctional centers. That a recent study, "Cellblocks or Classrooms," reported that there are an estimated 791,000 young black men in correctional institutions - compared to 603,000 in higher education institutions - may not mean a thing to Henderson. But, it should mean, no matter what we tell ourselves, that just putting these more or less nonviolent "criminals" in jail - mostly those who use drugs, not the big-time dealers - is just part of the answer. But, there she is out there fighting her own private war against those terrorizing her neighborhood. While she's out there, according to the study, "for the cost of incarcerating one person, a state could pay the annual tuition of five students in a public university." I hope we don't wage the war against global terrorism the way we've fought the war on drugs. I hope some of Henderson's neighbors will join her. Maybe a few of them will remember and act on that old saying: "All it takes for bad people to take over is for good people to do nothing." Maybe some of Henderson's fellow citizens will sound the brave call of Todd Beamer, one of those celebrated heroes aboard Flight 93 last September. Beamer took on those terrorists while crying out, "Let's roll!" Taliban terrorists. Drug dealers. Same thing, by any name. Roll on! Toni Henderson, and Godspeed. . Turner is a free-lance writer and work-force consultant on employee and community relations. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom