Pubdate: Mon, 11 Nov 2002 Source: News Journal (DE) Copyright: 2002 The News Journal Contact: http://www.delawareonline.com/newsjournal/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/822 Author: Edmund N. Carpenter II Note: Edmund N. Carpenter II lives in Centreville. STOP WAR ON DRUGS AND DECRIMINALIZE The newspapers, TV and radio are filled with articles and editorial comments about war. There is the war with Iraq, the war in Afghanistan, the war on Terror and so on. But somehow escaping analysis, searching discussion and serious critique is a war that has caused more American casualties than all these combined. Yet it drags on with no prospect of success. The war on drugs probably was doomed when it started as we mistakenly proceeded to try to solve a serious health problem with criminal laws, police forces, diplomatic corps and the even the military. None of them nor their combination is equal to the task. After learning the lesson in Prohibition that alcohol problems were not solvable with criminal laws, we forgot that and pursued the same erroneous approach with drugs, with the same terrible results. In the last 30 years, there's been a tremendous increase in crime not only in this country but in Mexico, Columbia, Venezuela, Turkey and elsewhere. American money funds a threatening underworld here and abroad. Public officials become corrupt. Civilian casualties happen daily with endless street shootings, even in Wilmington, in turf wars. Overstuffed prisons in Delaware and throughout the country lead to serious budget problems as resources are diverted. In Baltimore, a mother and five children were burned to death in an alleged attack by a drug dealer taking revenge for complaints to police. Will we ever have the political courage to reconsider our situation and follow the example of the repeal of Prohibition in 1933? When will we finally learn that criminal laws cannot solve a health problem? We must balance a legitimate desire to protect people from their own folly in indulging in drugs against the cost in innocent lives, the waste of endless prison expansion and the diversion of police and other resources to provide protection. Even if a few more addicts succumb -- and I doubt if there would be any increase because drugs are so readily available now -- is that comparable to the loss of an innocent child or a mother and her family? Let's start a dialogue about decriminalization of drugs and termination of the drug war. Begin by decriminalizing marijuana, treating it like tobacco, which have already killed many more people than marijuana, has. Restrict access by children, publish warnings and inaugurate more school programs explaining the dangers of drugs. At least this would sever the threatening connections children establish with dealers of hard drugs when they buy marijuana. Other states have already taken this step. Delaware should too. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth