Pubdate: Sun, 10 Apr 2005 Source: Palladium-Item (IN) Copyright: 2005 Palladium-Item Contact: http://www.pal-item.com/customerservice/contactus.html Website: http://www.pal-item.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2624 WHITE FLAGS IN DRUG WAR If the Bush Administration retreats federally in the battle against methamphetamine, it will have handed drug dealers a victory that will prove far more costly in the years ahead than the budget savings that might be realized today. Unlike the debates that surrounded decriminalization and the federal role of law enforcement in policing marijuana 40 years ago, we already know -- or, rather, law enforcement knows -- that meth and its effects pose a huge threat to the nation. Yet, despite this, the president proposes slashing a Justice Department methamphetamine initiative by some 60 percent, in addition to steep cuts in grant programs for anti-drug efforts to state and local governments. Granted, the administration's $12.4 billion proposed spending for the drug war in fiscal 2006 represents a 2.2 percent increase over current funding. But it is being directed more and more at the "supply" problem of global interception and crop eradication. State and local law enforcement, by contrast, more often find themselves combating the "demand" consequences of the drug problem. This is no time for the Bush Administration to be reducing support to those officers. It is time for our legislators in Washington to "Just say no" to Bush's proposed local spending reductions. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek