Pubdate: Tue, 24 Feb 2004 Source: Langley Advance (CN BC) Copyright: 2004 Lower Mainland Publishing Group Inc. Contact: http://www.langleyadvance.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1248 Author: Bob Groeneveld - Editor Section: Our View: EXTREME NEED Discovery of a major methamphetamine laboratory in Langley City drives the point home: something has to be done about the growing crime problem. And it all keeps going back to drugs. And whatever is done will have to be extreme. At one extremity is the American method of fighting drugs - they even call it "The War on Drugs" down there. Spend a lot of money to catch users and traffickers, spend more money to put them in jail, and spend even more money when they get out of jail and start over again. Or there's the European extremity, led by the Netherlands model. Treat drug abuse like a disease, treat addictions the way you would treat any chronic, metabolic requirement, and regulate the dickens out of the way drugs are produced, sold, and used. The American model strives to cut off supply, and thereby limit demand. If properly conducted, the War on Drugs should be effective in reducing the number of addicts who get started, reducing the ability of individuals to get illegal drugs in the first place. But once they're addicted, drug users automatically become criminals - not only because their drug-use is illegal, but because, as addicts, the drugs they must have are so expensive that the only way they can pay for them is through illegal means. To an addict, drugs are as necessary to survival as insulin to a diabetic. That's the way they see it, and no amount of preaching or denial among the rest of us will change that. They must get their fixes to go on. In this neck of the woods, that has come to mean a livelihood of stealing cars to provide transport to obtain and re-sell other people's belongings. In Holland, for many addicts it means stopping by the drugstore after work to buy a month's prescription of heroin cigarettes. Either way, Canada's middle-of-the-road approach isn't working, and it can't work. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin