Pubdate: Wed, 05 Feb 2003 Source: Big Sandy News, The (KY) Copyright: 2003 The Big Sandy News Contact: http://www.bigsandynews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1975 Author: Scott Perry Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization) WAR ON DRUGS: WE ARE FIGHTING A LOSING BATTLE America is clearly getting no closer to victory in the age-old War of Drugs than we did in the war on booze during Prohibition. During the sixteen years it was illegal to manufacture and sell alcoholic beverages in the country, we saw the beginnings of organized crime and we made millions of otherwise law-abiding Americans into criminals for the sake of a mug of beer or a glass of wine. If we learned anything from that grand failure, it's that we can't legislate morals. We also learned that what Americans want, Americans find a way to get. Our attempts to eradicate drug abuse is deja vu. It's not just a feeling that we've been here before, we have been here before. From 1917 through 1933. The War on Drugs is a colossal failure. We're no closer to our goal of stopping drug use than we are getting warmer in our orbit of the sun. In fact, we probably grow more distant every day. Just look at the numbers. Nearly eight out of every ten crimes committed in this country today are drug-related. Nearly eight out of every ten people in jail or prison are there because they broke laws related to drugs. What drugs have been taken off the streets? Should we follow historic precedence and decriminalize marijuana, cocaine and heroin? Our national conscience screams no! Common sense whispers yes. But there is an ironic twist in this debate. Many of the drugs causing much of our concern over abuse and crime are already legal. They're made and sold every day to people who are presumably following their doctors' orders but who, in many cases, are using taxpayer subsidized health care to reap millions of dollars in profits by diverting their medication to the streets. Do we legalize the diversion of legal drugs? Of course not. But we absolutely have to take a step back, take a deep breath, and take a brand new look at how we are fighting this war. The first step is admitting that we aren't just losing the fight, we're being routed, and we're flushing tons of tax dollars down a bottomless toilet. As long as we prosecute this war by emotion we will be forever making excuses for failure. At some point, very soon, logic must enter the national debate. Which is worse, the potential for creating more drug use by decriminalizing certain drugs or the potential for creating more criminal drug abusers by pursuing a no-win war? Truth is, we are creating more persistent drug trafficking felons in Eastern Kentucky, anyway, than we are reforming in jail because those people have even fewer economic choices once they have been busted. What choices for change does an unemployed, undereducated dope dealer have but to go back into "business" after doing time? As long as the profits outweigh the risks, there are no alternatives for economic survival and the demand for their "wares" is high, the dope dealers will always be in business. Remove the profits through decriminalization, though, and the incentive is gone. So is the crime, and the cost of battling it. We are out of choices, people. Drug-related crime will multiply and be with us as long as there is money to be made dealing and people willing to buy. Prohibition proved that point, and billions and billions of dollars spent to fight this War on Drugs have not changed that truth one bit. Billions more won't either. - --Scott Perry - --- MAP posted-by: Josh