Pubdate: Tue, 11 Mar 2003 Source: Daily Cougar (U of Houston, TX Edu) Copyright: 2003, Student Publications Contact: http://www.uh.edu/campus/cougar/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1374 Author: Dean Becker Note: Vol 68, Issue 108, Page 1 (Not online) U.S. DRUG LAWS AN ABOMINATION Dean Becker guest columnist Like a baby who feels safe and hidden from the world if his face is covered, perhaps Sara Follin seeks to gain comfort in hiding from U.S. drug policies. After reviewing her column ("Drugs impair your education," Opinion, Feb. 28), I realized that her initial look at these drug laws shows strong awareness of their inadequacies. Her take on the USA Patriot Act considers the violation of centuries-old civil rights sought with this act. Most striking is her take on the Higher Education Act, which forbids student loans to be given to anyone caught smoking a joint but still allows murderers, rapists and child molesters to tap the government till. Apparently, this year's onslaught of television public service announcements that show teenage pot smokers committing manslaughter, subsidizing terrorists and otherwise subverting the will of our nation have taken their toll on Follin. Her daddy had it right when he said: "Smoking weed is like skinny dipping; when you are old enough and in the right company it is OK to do." Our nanny state, ruled these days by the multinational corporations that seek to control every aspect of our "buying experience," loves the current set of drug laws. Follin wants to believe in our elected officials, do the right thing and alert the rest of us about the potential need to acquiesce to the multinationals for our own good. Follin finishes her column with the phrase: "For those who choose instead to 'puff, puff, pass' remember, if you get caught now, you could not only lose your right to enroll in college, but also your civil rights as well." I would submit that the loss of civil rights comes not from smoking, injecting or otherwise using "illegal" drugs but rather from the unconstitutional laws themselves. Further, I would state that until we end the war on drugs, we will forever be subject to an increasing escalation of the violence, disease, corruption, death and destruction that comes not from drug use but from drug prohibition. We can choose to hide behind a "blanket" of unconstitutional laws that benefit the multinationals or we can choose to stand for justice, truth and reality. As the president of Houston's chapter of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws, as the community liaison for the Drug Policy Forum of Texas and as a radio reporter, I consider all drug laws to be racist, bigoted and a violation of our civil rights. I believe that the hatred of the drug warriors toward their own children and the trillions of dollars accrued by the multinationals constitutes, in effect, an 88-year-old jihad against our own people. As Reverend of the Church of God's Evident Truth, I consider these drug laws to be a disgrace, a scandal and an abomination before God. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens