Pubdate: Mon, 04 Sep 2006 Source: Amarillo Globe-News (TX) Copyright: 2006 Amarillo Globe-News Contact: http://amarillonet.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/13 Author: Ann Rothkrug Warnecke A WELCOME NEW VOICE FOR DRUG LAW REFORM Whether readers found Charles Paul Stephens' Aug. 23 guest column on failed American drug policy infuriating, unsettling, illuminating, inspiring, or all of these, his estimable work cannot be dismissed as filler for what Globe-News editorialist Dave Henry recently dubbed "the public's page for ranting and raving." A few years ago, I attended a League of Women Voters seminar on drug policy. The panel included criminal justice professionals and representatives of the black and Hispanic communities. Concerned citizens gathered in a standing-room-only hall evidently because they considered the drug problem grave, with current policy piling on more problems than it solves effectively. Were these citizens just a bunch a dopes, prisoners of vain hope that they might "fight dope" in a "drug-friendly" society that so profitably markets pills and potions, weeds and pipes - with the promise that pleasure can be attained, pain avoided, at all costs? Walter Cronkite is among eminent Americans who lend their voices to drug law reform. Stephens' contribution is as eloquent as anything I've read on this subject by Cronkite and others. If another public meeting on drug policy is convened - and it should be! - Stephens merits a place on the panel. Ann Rothkrug Warnecke Amarillo - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman