Pubdate: Tue, 02 Apr 2002 Source: Langley Advance (CN BC) Copyright: 2002 Lower Mainland Publishing Group Inc. Contact: http://www.langleyadvance.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1248 Authors: Kevin Hebert, Alan Randell Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v02/n580/a07.html THE CRIME ISSUE: PROHIBITION TO BLAME Dear Editor, Erin McKay's article, "Drugs Top Langley's Crime List," was way off the mark. It quotes police sergeant Brian Cantera as saying "75 to 80 per cent of Langley's serious crimes, such as break and enters, assaults, thefts, and robberies, are drug-related" mostly because of addicts stealing to buy drugs. The real cause of all that crime is actually drug prohibition. Drug laws drive up prices, making people steal to purchase drugs. Drug prohibition turns what was once a minor health problem - drug addiction - into a major social problem. Who breaks into your house to steal money for tobacco? Nobody. We need to regulate currently illegal drugs as we do alcohol and tobacco. This will not result in a drug-free society. However, neither has decades of drug prohibition. Worst of all, though, was Cantera's claim, "If you save even one or two kids from getting involved in drugs, you've done your job." Is this what we have come to? We allow drug dealers to sell drugs to children for massive profits. Unlike alcohol and tobacco sellers, these drug dealers will not check your kid's ID to verify age. They will sell to anyone. And we are supposed to be satisfied if one or two kids survive these insane policies? It is time for honest people to say, "Enough." We have seen what drug prohibition brings, and we have had enough. End the ill-conceived war on drugs, and allow addicts to purchase drugs through regulated outlets. This is the only way to really protect our children from street dealers. Kevin Hebert Chicopee, USA ************************************************** Drugs: Ban creates hardships Dear Editor, Why do governments prohibit certain drugs [Crime!: Drugs top Langley's crime list, March 26, Langley Advance News]? Is it to protect users from harm? No, that can't be the reason, because users suffer more (adulterated drugs and jail time) when a drug is banned, as compared to when it is legally available, and besides, the most dangerous drugs of all, alcohol and tobacco, are legal. Is it to reduce the crime associated with illegal drugs? No, that can't be the reason, because banning a drug always gives rise to more crime (drug cartels, petty crime by users as prohibition makes drug prices much higher, violent disputes between dealers) than when the drug is legally available. Is it that our drug laws are nothing less than a brutal pogrom designed to distract our attention from more important issues, and to provide bigger budgets for our police officers, by ruining the lives of the innocent few who ingest or sell certain drugs? After the Holocaust, people asked themselves, "How did it happen? How was it possible that a majority of the German people was persuaded to accept, if not support, Hitler's brutal policies?" One of the reasons might well have been a stream of "objective" newspaper accounts of the terror, written in such an uncritical, matter-of-fact fashion that it seemed to the non-Jewish reader that persecuting Jews was "normal." After a while, the majority simply shrugged and allowed the government free rein to commit genocide. Despite all the talk about how the Holocaust must never happen again, it is happening again, all around us, only the victims this time are the users of certain drugs. Like the German people before us, the media have lulled us into tolerating state sanctioned evil. Those who do not use illegal drugs have become acclimatized to the cops' incessant hounding of those innocent souls who do. We shrug and turn the page. What to do? Assuming you care about innocent people being carted off to jail (possibly not, because persecuting a innocent minority does sell newspapers), please make your drug bust stories less one-sided in favour of the cops by including the comments of the individuals arrested and their families as well as, wherever possible, the comments of someone who opposes these laws. Please try to put a human face on the suffering. Alan Randell Victoria - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom