Pubdate: Mon, 25 Feb 2002 Source: Eagle, The (DC) Copyright: 2002 The Eagle Feedback: http://www.eagle.american.edu/section.cfm/48/5/0/1 Website: http://www.eagle.american.edu/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1820 Related: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v02/n316/a04.html DRUG RAIDS UNNECESSARY Perhaps because of post 9-11 trauma, AU students are a little more sensitive to events that disrupt their routine life. Or maybe students get a little touchy about witnessing masked DEA police officers that march into their residence halls, throw their neighbors to the floor, hand cuff them and toss them into jail cells lock and key. What the Washington Post called "a month-long under cover drug investigation" turned into a direct slap shot stinging every AU student's face hard. AU spokesman Todd Sedmak claimed, "We have been supporting [police] in their work to make campus a safer place for everyone." But I say "ha!" to Mr. Sedmak and challenge his claim on the grounds that a "Traffic"-esque drug bust on campus makes no one feel any safer. From the students who were best buds with these "insidious" dealers to the Pink Floyd loving pot heads to the honors students who just hit a joint for the first time, everyone and anyone who has par taken "illegal" activities ranging from pot smoking to coke snorting to even illegal underage drinking has been affected. Reflecting on the years when our baby-boomer parents were in college, drug experimentation was a part of "the whole College thing," and it continues to be. Go to any university in this country and it will be the same thing; kids trying drugs and drinking illegally. I remember my cousin, who graduated suma cum laude, asking me after my first semester if I'd done any crazy experimentation at college, while smirking in reminiscence of her own experiences. With second semester in full swing, excited pledges, eager SC candidates and festive basketball fans have only been strengthening campus spirit. And now our growing morale and charging spirit has been mulled over by unnecessary covetousness. Also taking into account the unnecessary dubbing of AU's "drug problem" as being an actual discrepancy, compared to other universities drugs are no more prevalent at AU. And if there was a so-called drug problem why weren't we made aware of it? Ben Ladner's use of cronyism by allowing this investigation, but failing to clue in his students has proven to have strong repercussions. Making AU's campus a safer place should not entail condoning police brutality and allowing federal arrests to happen to innocuous students. In regard to those that were arrested Thursday night, they are no different then the users, people that just like to get high. If innocently smoking some dope, drinking before the age of 21, or in taking any other illegal narcotics for that matter is such a threat in the eyes of the state then I pity this country for its miscalculations. I will note the obvious; there are bigger threats running rampant throughout this city and country than some harmless college stoners. - --- MAP posted-by: Ariel