Pubdate: Mon, 10 Sep 2007 Source: Intelligencer Journal (Lancaster, PA) Copyright: 2007 Lancaster Newspapers, Inc. Contact: http://www.lancasteronline.com/pages/paper/intell/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/211 Author: Robert E. Field PROHIBITION DOES NOT WORK To the Editor: Bob Herbert's column "Vegas and the exploitation of women" correctly describes the atrocities resulting from illegal prostitution, but fails to identify the core cause: When we legislate prohibition for something that a large segment of the public insists upon, we simply turn the industry over to criminals at great cost to society in general and taxpayers in particular. Consider how many conscientious citizens would almost overnight become law breakers were we to prohibit the sale of tobacco products as we once did alcohol! Until the State Lottery was introduced, the numbers racket flourished. We may not approve of people spending money on lottery tickets, but at least the results are honest, the bets are taxed for the benefit of the elderly, and we no longer generate and enrich criminals. Las Vegas mayor Oscar Goodman understands that legal brothels would protect women from pimps and other predators, customer abuse, require periodic health examinations and advice, discourage teenage sex workers, provide normal employment benefits, and provide a source of revenue for the city rather than for criminals. Similarly marijuana, the most popular and a relatively benign illegal drug, should be sold through State Stores. This would break the back of the illegal drug industry, prevent sales to young people, and provide a huge source of revenue to treat the rare cases of addiction as a health problem, not as a crime. Prohibition doesn't work: It didn't for alcohol, it won't for drugs, and it never has for prostitution. Robert E. Field Editor's note: Field is co-chair of Common Sense for Drug Policy - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake