Pubdate: Sat, 30 Aug 2003 Source: Oregonian, The (Portland, OR) Copyright: 2003 The Oregonian Contact: http://www.oregonlive.com/oregonian/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/324 Author: Bruce Alexander Knight Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/walters.htm (Walters, John) Note: Portland consultant Bruce Alexander Knight is a former chairman of the Libertarian Party of Oregon and three-time congressional candidate in region's 3rd District. BUSH TEAM'S PROHIBITION DRUG POLICY IS A BUST John Walters, White House director of the National Office for Drug Control Policy, visited Portland this month "to learn about the challenges that local leaders face and successes this city has achieved," according to his Aug. 13 opinion piece, "Fight against drug abuse will be won at local level," in The Oregonian. Unfortunately the drug czar has not yet learned the central lesson that prohibition doesn't work. Yes, the fight must be fought and can be won at the local level. What Walters and his superiors fail to acknowledge is that countries and communities that attack drug abuse as a medical problem are far more successful at minimizing it than those pursuing his prohibitionist approach. Walters says "66 percent of the men arrested in Portland last year tested positive for drugs." He also says law enforcement is critical, "since citizen involvement works best . . . where laws are upheld and people are discouraged from bringing drugs into the neighborhood in the first place." Sadly, as when alcohol was illegal, the war on drugs drives prices and profits up, luring the desperate and unscrupulous to get into a lucrative black market. Nobody pushed marijuana in schools before it was banned. Walters is right to say that "there is no single route to success" and that "lasting progress against drugs requires a balanced strategy of community drug prevention, treatment and law enforcement." Disappointingly, his administration's approach relies too heavily on locking up users and skimps on prevention and treatment. The drug czar is also right that local communities must tackle the problem and help deliver change. Several states and localities have done just that by legalizing medical marijuana use, but he and the administration are doing their best to harass patients, doctors and legal providers. As with federal interference in 100-percent-legal assisted suicide in Oregon, this policy tramples state and individual rights guaranteed by the U.S. Constitution, the highest law of our land. Walters concludes that "by confronting this issue openly and honestly, we can achieve real results." Lacking the intellectual honesty to admit that the alleged cure is worse than the disease, drug warriors' results are rising abuse rates, loss of Americans' freedoms, and the largest per-capita prison population in the world. Prohibition precludes rational regulation and other peaceful controls. Isn't it time to let states and communities tackle the problem in ways that really work? - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk