Pubdate: Tue, 15 Feb 2005 Source: Abbotsford News (CN BC) Copyright: 2005 Hacker Press Ltd. Contact: http://www.abbynews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1155 Author: Kurt Langmann IT'S TIME TO END THIS FARCICAL WAR ON DRUGS Politicians and assorted do-gooders, from the federal government down to the City of Vancouver, are busily applauding themselves over the four pillars strategy they've implemented in the city's drug ghetto. The latest wrinkle is the free heroin trial, in which 100 addicts are receiving free drugs under the supervision of medical staff who will compare how well these 100 do versus another 100 who won't get free drugs. It's a well-meaning notion, I suppose, but I wonder how this will be rationalized to seniors and the seriously ill who are putting out big money for life-saving and pain-reducing pharmaceuticals. It hardly seems fair, does it? But that's the "nanny state" for you. Every social ill or evil can be solved by regulation and the attention of a squadron of social workers, plus a generous dollop of taxpayer cash. Even insolvable problems don't faze these experts. We're much too genteel a society to follow the Chinese example (a bullet in the addict's head, and a bill sent to the family for the bullet), but perhaps the best solution to the rampant, heinous crime that accompanies narcotic addiction would be for the government to simply give up trying to control it. Legalize it and let people do whatever they like with their bodies and souls. Narcotics would be cheap, and thus there'd be no profit for organized crime, nor reason for addicts to steal to maintain their habits. This is essentially what the government has done with gambling, a burgeoning business that soon will generate a billion dollars annually for the provincial treasury. Rather than attempt to prosecute Internet gambling sites located offshore - admittedly an impossibility - the government runs a growing armada of slot machines that offer pathetic odds to gamblers and huge profits to the government and private casino operators. Solicitor General Rich Coleman said recent rule changes to allow a popular new version of poker at officially sanctioned casinos has resulted in the closure of three unlicensed Vancouver poker rooms. Less money for illegal operators and more money for the government. Personally, I'm not at all happy with a government that runs a "numbers racket", but if that's what people want to do with their money, have at it. And I support those who wish to help addicts of any description with reform programs; that's a very noble cause with some successes at helping people escape dependency. Coleman considers the gambling rule changes a progressive step, yet he doesn't see that the same principle applies to the vice of drugs. The war on drugs is a farce, just like the war for democracy is a sham. It's time to hoist the white flag, and put the money to better uses. Let the addicts have at it. * Kurt Langmann is editor of the Aldergrove Star, a sister paper to the Abbotsford News and member of the Black Press B.C. News Group - --- MAP posted-by: Josh