Pubdate: Wed, 29 Jun 2005 Source: Barbados Advocate (Barbados) Copyright: Barbados Advocate 2005 Contact: http://www.barbadosadvocate.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3499 Author: Rupert Johnsona A DANGEROUS MIX AN OBSESSION is a very dangerous abnormality for it generally causes a person to become fixated on a single idea to the exclusion of all others. For example, a person's preoccupation with the perpetual checking and rechecking of doors and windows before going to sleep may cause that person to forget that there is a pot of oil still sizzling on the stove. The probable result is too horrible to even contemplate. As it is with an individual, so it is with a nation. The United States' preoccupation with illicit drug trafficking is perhaps the most glaring case of this form of obsessiveness. That country is so fixated on the illicit drug trade that it is totally oblivious of the firearm trafficking that accompanies this activity. It is true that the sale and use of illegal drugs have become the bane of society worldwide, and its perniciousness has had devastating effects on millions of all ages. Therefore, individuals and nation-states that are guilty of trafficking in illegal drugs should be punished very severely. Similarly, manufacturers and nations that are engaged in the illegal trade of firearms should also pay a heavy price for their morally depraved actions. Imposing sanctions on the perpetrators of illegal drugs without imposing sanctions on the perpetrators of illegal firearms is not only futile, but hypocritical. It is well known that guns and illegal drugs form an inseparable combination of evil. Both are equally lethal and immoral. While a significant portion of the illegal drugs circulating in the US may likely originate in many Third World countries, it may be readily assumed that over 90 per cent of the firearms associated with the illegal drug trade originates in First World countries including the United States. Since illegal drugs and firearms are inextricably linked, why is it that the US is so reluctant to impose sanctions on itself, and other industrialised countries that continue to export illicit guns to the Third World and other countries? Is it because these First World countries and their industrialised tycoons are bent on nurturing the perniciousness of their firearms economy? Isn't it time the US stop its futile, and hypocritical obsession solely with the illegal drug trade, and launch a two-pronged attack on the illicitness and perniciousness of drugs and guns? RUPERT JOHNSONA - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom