Pubdate: Wed, 02 Oct 2002 Source: Florida Today (FL) Copyright: 2002 Florida Today Contact: http://www.floridatoday.com/forms/services/letters.htm Website: http://www.flatoday.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/532 Author: Billy Cox Cited: Drug Policy Forum of Florida http://www.dpffl.org JEB'S PRIORITIES ARE IN ORDER Dear Gov. Bush: With another one of those awful elections right around the corner, I wish we could just swear you in for an automatic second term without having to go through that demoralizing balloting process again. I mean, everybody knows you're gonna win anyway, and nothing good can come from turning it over to bean-counting nerds. Florida's gonna wind up a laughing stock again on Leno and Letterman, and it'll give all these cackling gasbags a forum for revisiting the Y2K voting disaster. They'll be ranting a blue streak about cronyism, about how ChoicePoint/Database Technologies (DBT) was awarded a $2.3 million, no-competitive-bidding contract to screen voter-registration rolls from a company that had previously performed the task for $5,700. Oh, and they'll go on and on about Jim Crow in cyberspace, about how DBT used race as one of its criteria to scrub 57,700 felons from its voter registration roles, and they'll talk about how most of them weren't felons at all. They won't give you any credit for setting things straight after 2,834 felons who'd had their civil rights restored in other states were illegally barred from voting in Florida in 2000. Like how, in February 2001, after brother George won Florida by 537 votes, your Office of Executive Clemency announced these folks would no longer have to complete 15-page application forms. Sorry -- I'm digressing. What I wanted to tell you was how much I love that campaign ad of yours, the one where you responded so quickly to a woman who wanted a stoplight posted at a dangerous intersection for the neighborhood schoolkids. It made me feel as if I'm not just another faceless, unempowered number anymore. So I was wondering if you could put a new sidewalk on Dusseldorf Avenue in Palm Bay, so mothers can push their baby strollers in safety. Also, there's a woman at work who can't get Rockledge to put more fill dirt in her back yard, which she's losing to erosion (call me and I'll get you her number). And you don't have to recover every last one of those 500 kids who've vanished under DCF care -- just find Rilya Wilson to get the media off your back. Another reason you should skip the campaign and go straight to the swearing-in ceremonies is because the media has no respect for the privacy of family matters, like the struggles of your daughter, Noelle, with drug addiction. Even though people like Satellite Beach resident and drug-law reform advocate Harold Koenig are in your corner. "I'm delighted with how she's being treated. She has a disease, and this is a showcase for what we'd like to see for everyone, regardless of racial, social or economic status," says Koenig, whose daughter has battled addiction with an entirely different response from the system. "They didn't confiscate (Noelle's) car, they didn't use her as a confidential informant, and they didn't allow traffickers to bail her out of jail for sex." There's a common misperception of a double standard for the families of privilege, which we know isn't true. Like, when John Ashcroft was Missouri's zero-tolerance chief exec in 1992, and his nephew, Alex, got busted for 61 marijuana plants in his basement. Growing 50 heads of weed usually invites federal prosecution and prison time, but Alex faced only state charges, and he got off with probation. What's important is, there's no evidence Uncle John intervened in any way! My advice, Gov. Bush: Stay the course on the drug wars, and don't be swayed by propaganda from elitists like The New England Journal of Medicine, which called for the legalization of medical marijuana in 1997. Alleviating pain and suffering isn't the issue. Last year, for the first time in recorded history, Florida's medical examiner records indicated more people suffered fatal overdoses from abusing prescription painkillers than from illegal drugs. We all know medical marijuana is an evolutionary step on the road to sanctioning recreational pot. And even though there hasn't been a single documented case of anyone overdosing to death on dope, that doesn't mean it can't happen some day. After all, nobody foresaw suicide jetliners crashing into the World Trade Center, either. Do your best to keep the right-to-treatment referendum off the ballot in 2004. Never mind troublemakers like Stephen Heath of the Drug Policy Forum of Florida, who takes cheap shots like, "It would give everyone the same access to treatment that Noelle has. Even though, as rich as (Bush) is, I don't know why she's being treated at taxpayer expense." Let's keep Florida's prisons among the most populous in the United States. Sure, we're in a recession, but principle has no price tag. Keep telling it like it is with those campaign ads. Need another witness? Sign me up. - --- MAP posted-by: SHeath(DPFFlorida)