Pubdate: Thu, 27 Sep 2007 Source: Taos News, The (NM) Copyright: The Taos News 2007 Contact: http://www.taosnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3001 Author: J. Michael Jones Note: J. Michael Jones is a resident of Rancho de Taos, a Marine combat veteran and retired police officer who works every day to bring an end to the War on Drugs. Cited: Law Enforcement Against Prohibition http://www.leap.cc Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?199 (Mandatory Minimum Sentencing) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?233 (Law Enforcement Against Prohibition) THE NEED FOR A POLITICAL SOLUTION Many are calling for a political solution for the war in Iraq. It has become painfully obvious that a military solution is not aviable option. Perhaps now people can recognize too that a military/paramilitary-like approach is not a viable solution to the U.S. policy known as the War on Drugs. After 37 years of the enforcement ap-proach as national drug policy, we still have chiefs of police announcing new efforts to "target drug trafficking. The police force in Gainesville, Fla., where I served for more than 20 years including three tours as a narcotics officer and later, deputy chief of police, recently announced such a crack down. I use this example because it dem-onstrates the efforts of a chief to address the concerns of the citizens he serves. Certainly no offense is meant to the Gainesville police chief, but targeting drug trafficking is neither new, nor effective. The results are, at best, a temporary disruption of illegal drug activities, and job opportuni-ties for those eager to replace the recently arrested dealers. My intent is not to fault the Gainesville Police Department, but ask: What can they do? The simple, accurate answer is nothing effective. Law enforcement has been tasked with a mission that it simply can't accomplish. To eliminate drug traf-fic, the demand for drugs must be elimi-nated. Humans are pleasure seekers and find their pleasure in a variety of ways. Tobacco and alcohol are two popular drugs that people use; they differ from illegal drugs because they are legal, albeit addictive and dangerous when overused. Politics have driven the war on drugs to its current level. Politicians found that being "tough on crime," especially drugs, was a sure-fire vote-getter. Fueled by the corrections industry lobby, minimum mandatory sentencing also became a position that politicians felt they had to adopt or be viewed by constituents as weak on crime. The fact is that after nearly a trillion dollars, untold millions of personnel hours in the criminal jus-tice system, paramilitary operations in foreign countries, and hundreds of thou-sands of citizens incarcerated, drugs are cheaper, more potent, and easier to get than ever. Drugs should be legalized, regulated, controlled and distributed in a manner similar to the alcohol and tobacco models, using some of the successful European systems. The results will be: reductions in deaths and disease from drug use; reduced crimes associated with drugs; and the black market that controls the import, distribu-tion and sale of drugs will be eliminated, among other benefits. Wasting tax dollars doing the same thing over again with no success is no solution. We want a rational approach that treatsdrug use as the health care issue it is. We want a system that generates tax dollars rather than wastes them. Above all, we want our children's access to drugs to be as regulated as their access to alcohol and tobacco. Now, criminals determine access. By fighting a war on drugs the govern-ment has increased the problems and made them worse. A system of regulation rather than prohibition is far less harmful, more ethical, and a more effective public policy. I am a proud member of Law Enforce-ment Against Prohibition (LEAP), a non-profit educational group whose members include current and former law enforce-ment officers, state and federal judges, prosecutors, corrections officials and oth-ers. We educate the public, the media, and policy makers, to the failure of current policy by presenting a true picture of the history, causes and effects of drug abuse and the crimes related to prohibition. A charity golf tournament will be held tomorrow (Sept. 28) at the Taos Country Club to benefit the educational work of LEAP. The two-person scramble golf event begins at 11 a.m. Registration is $100 and includes golf, lunch, prizes and a hole-in-one contest for a Polaris ATV. Visit www. leap.cc/. Join. Be active. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake