Pubdate: Mon, 18 Feb 2002 Source: Charlotte Sun Herald (FL) Copyright: 2002 Sun Coast Media Group Inc. Contact: http://www.sun-herald.com/newsch.htm Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1708 Author: Colorado Springs Gazette Note: Original editorial http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v02/n249/a02.html WHAT'S THE BEST WAY TO KEEP OUT KIDS OFF DRUGS? Newspapers across the country recently featured an advertisement authored by the White House's Office of National Drug Control Policy. Superimposed across the dimly lit, somber face of a young man -- your son, perhaps? -- are his purported words, ''On Saturday, I watched my little brother, rehearsed with the band and helped bribe a judge to release a man nicknamed 'The Butcher.' '' Below his image there's this admonition: ''Drug money helps support terror. Buy drugs and you could be supporting it, too. Get the facts at theantidrug.com. Get help at the National Treatment Hotline, 800-662-HELP.'' The Web site includes a reiteration of the now well-worn story that terrorist cells and guerrilla movements make money off of the illegal drug trade. Presumably, the aforementioned ''Butcher'' is one of myriad no-goodniks clogging the corrupt court system of some hapless, drug-trafficking Third World land. One site link directs visitors to President Bush's recent observation -- offering new spin on Sept. 11 - that, '' ... the traffic in drugs finances the work of terror, sustaining terrorists,'' and that, ''If you quit drugs, you join the fight against terror in America.'' It would seem to follow, of course, that if you choose not to quit drugs, you are aiding and abetting terror. Indeed, you are a traitor to your country, right? Perhaps it's hard to blame the federal government's anti-drug warriors for so ham-handed an attempt to exploit last year's attack on America; that fateful date already has been appropriated for so many other causes in similarly pre-textual ways. And, anyway, who doesn't want to keep people, especially young people, from polluting their minds through drug abuse? So, whatever works, right? If only this latest campaign didn't beg so desperately for credulity. Much like its many predecessor campaigns, this newest drug-war pitch serves for the most part to illustrate how stubbornly Uncle Sam clings to his sense of denial. Certainly, taking a puff of marijuana could conceivably benefit some terrorist network somewhere or, at the very least, some thuggish individuals. Just as there also was a time when taking even a sip of beer could have been said to enrich mafiosi like the fabled Al Capone, who made a mint running banned brew across the border from Canada during Prohibition. The difference, if it need be pointed out, is that beer is now perfectly legal and heavily taxed while pot isn't. Thus, the purveyors of the one have become venerable corporate citizens who underwrite the ballparks that bear their names. The purveyors of the other, well, are terrorists, guerrillas and the like. It's axiomatic: When a good or a service is outlawed, outlaws provide it. Amid unabated demand, the price is right and offers all the incentive they need. And if they're locked up by the law or killed off by rivals, there always are more outlaws waiting to step in. That doesn't mean society should throw in the towel, particularly regarding drug experimentation by young people. Rather, drugs, alcohol and many, many other temptations for the young should be first and foremost a matter for parental intervention. Parents cannot be everywhere, but they are the best, the first and the last line of defense against ill influences. Their efforts can and do lead to abstinence; surely, their success rate is no shabbier than the government's, for all of our tax dollars it spends and all the people it imprisons in the name of keeping our kids off of drugs. Maybe in the broader context of that bloody, costly drug war, ads linking terrorism and drug use -- in other words, the tautology that bad guys have few qualms about doing illegal things -- are benign. At worst, they insult the intelligence. But they also help obscure the truth that the real drug war only can be won at home, not in Washington. - -- The Gazette (Colorado Springs, Colo.). - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D