Pubdate: Mon, 16 Apr 2007 Source: Leader-Telegram (Eau Claire, WI) Copyright: 2007 Eau Claire Press Contact: http://www.cvol.net/contacteditor.htm#editorform Website: http://www.leadertelegram.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/236 Author: D.H. Michon DRUG WAR'S SOUR TASTE Recent news reports about candy-flavored methamphetamine illustrate an inescapable law of the drug war's black market, to whit: Hit one popular drug hard enough to affect supply, and the professional dealers will always come back with something much worse. We have seen it all before: Cocaine begat freebase which begat crack which begat methamphetamine. "Ice" will be next. It may have felt good to knock out the majority of the ad hoc meth labs, but it's only opened the market to vicious and over-funded drug gangs in Mexico and to "products" such as candy-flavored meth. The principle holds for other drugs as well. In fact, poisonous alcohol was common during Prohibition. You can trace all the drugs to their natural plant-based forebears. In this instance we would have been better off to allow coca-leaf chewing and teas long ago, before this cat got out of the bag. Can we turn it around? Yes, but it will take political courage, not the sort of fear-pandering most politicians have displayed on the subject thus far. Prohibition must end before we can recontrol the market in these substances. No form of government regulation would allow candy-flavored meth. Ending Prohibition would pull the market out from under the drug gangs. We have tried drug prohibition for over 100 years, and Nixon's drug war is in its 37th year, with results opposite to what was intended. It's time to try another way. D.H. MICHON Eau Claire