Pubdate: Fri, 17 Jun 2005 Source: Cincinnati Enquirer (OH) Copyright: 2005 The Cincinnati Enquirer Contact: http://enquirer.com/today/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/86 Note: Limits LTEs to 100 words Author: Don Parcell Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/opinion.htm (Opinion) DRUG WAR LOOKS MORE LIKE PROHIBITION I have supported fighting illegal drugs since the war on drugs began, but recently I began to see the futility of it. We spend ever-increasing tax dollars here and abroad trying to reduce the supply, with no results. There are thousands of people in jail for violating drug laws who haven't harmed anyone but themselves, and hundreds more for violent crimes related to selling these drugs. Neighborhoods and even entire cities are being destroyed and innocent people are being killed by thugs peddling drugs. Think of the neighborhoods in Cincinnati under siege. If the drug gangs aren't eliminated, Cincinnati could end up like Detroit, once a beautiful and prosperous city and a desirable place to live. Drug gangs turned it into a war zone. But the money we spend trying to eliminate the drug gangs and the source of drugs has been wasted. For every step we take forward in this battle we seem to take two back. The futility of fighting the drug war is reminiscent of the battle to stop the consumption of alcohol during the Prohibition era. The 18th Amendment - outlawing the sale, consumption and manufacturing of alcoholic beverages - was repealed 13 years after its enaction. It was a total failure because the gangster element realized that the people who wanted to drink were going to continue and a staggering sum of money could be made if the gangsters supplied their needs. Violence erupted when other gangsters moved in with the same idea. Big protection money corrupted enough police and judges to close their eyes and keep the gangsters in business. Now we have the illegal-drug era. Deja vu. A market can't be destroyed as long as enough people are willing to support it and the supply of what they desire is plentiful. The criminal element cannot be stopped with the threat of jail terms or even capital punishment as long as the financial rewards are high enough. Looks as if we have two choices: Get more realistic and supply the users through government outlets and eliminate the drug wars, or continue in futility to build enough prisons to confine the users and sellers at a cost of millions of dollars we desperately need elsewhere. The desire to use drugs can't be stopped by passing laws It is idealism vs. realism. Idealism is like utopia. It may be very desirable, but it is unobtainable. Don Parcell is retired and lives in Cleves. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom