Pubdate: Sun, 07 Sep 2003
Source: Honolulu Star-Bulletin (HI)
Copyright: 2003 Honolulu Star-Bulletin
Contact:  http://www.starbulletin.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/196
Author: Tracy Ryan 
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine)
Note: The author ran for governor as a Libertarian in 2002. To read about the
"ice epidemic" in Hawaii, go to http://www.mapinc.org/areas/Hawaii .

WE CAN FIX 'ICE' PROBLEM WITH MANAGED ADDICTION

During my recent campaign for governor, I asked audiences what their priorities
were on drug policy. The question was: "Which is more important to you; keeping
drug addicts from getting their hands on drugs, or keeping them from getting
their hands on your property?" It should be clear that if we could limit our
drug-related problems to the health issues incident to addiction, the result
would be a great improvement in the current situation of high property crime
rates, high taxes to pay for arresting and incarcerating addicts and, despite
blips up and down in drug use during the past few decades, no real end in
sight. 

In a managed-addiction model, addicts register with the government for the
legal right to use drugs. In Hawaii, this might be handled through the
Department of Health, which could manufacture and provide heroin, cocaine and
methamphetamines in predictably pure doses to people already addicted. The cost
of the distribution would be borne by the addicts. 

Since the actual cost of producing these drugs is a tiny fraction of the street
prices addicts now pay, the motivation driving them to steal would be removed.
Police report that as many as 90 percent of the thefts in Hawaii are caused by
addicts stealing to get the money they need to buy street drugs. If this is
true, the community could expect a sharp drop in these crimes when addicts no
longer felt compelled to steal. 

These results have been seen in Switzerland and elsewhere using these models.
You and I would no longer be victims of someone else's drug problems.

Managed addiction separates the addict from the illegal drug trade, destroying
its profitability. The problems posed by recreational drug use and the
likelihood that more people will become addicted can be better addressed when
addicts are in a program than when they are out sharing drugs with all sorts of
people. It is not a foolproof program. It doesn't claim to cure people of their
addictions. It merely does what is possible in terms of relieving the rest of
us from having to share in the addicts' problems by being the victims of their
crimes and the source of the tax money squandered trying to catch and punish
them.

Most addicts, though still using drugs, would see an improvement in their
health and ability to function. The drugs to be used would not be mixed with
dangerous fillers, as many street drugs are today. This would reduce trips to
emergency rooms and deaths due to overdosing. The amount of time addicts now
spend hustling up the money they need for a fix and then trying to get
connected with a dealer could be redirected into constructive activities.

Putting addicts into regular contact with qualified Department of Health
personnel would increase the likelihood that they would hear about treatment
options or engage in healthy drug substitution. That's where less harmful drugs
are used that increase daily functioning while alleviating withdrawal cravings.
Some addicts might use maintenance drugs such as methadone during the work week
and get "high" only at home on the weekends. A family with an addicted member
would be happy knowing they could trust that member again instead of worrying
that they are being lied to and robbed by a self-destructive addict.

The problems with managed-addiction models are political. Members of the law
enforcement community will fight like tigers to keep their budgets from being
cut. Those seeing drug use as a moral absolute that can never be tolerated
regardless of the harm done to the rest of us by their drug wars, will fight
managed addiction. 

Government leaders will resist it for three reasons: 

*- Because they are afraid of the political consequences of tolerating any drug
use (no guts),

*- Because they believe the law enforcement model really does do a better job
than
managed addiction (no brains),

* Because they don't like a system where drug users aren't punished for
engaging
in behavior that is offensive to them (no heart).

Put them all together and you get to the essential problem that Hawaii faces
with elected officials: no leadership.
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MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk