Pubdate: Tue, 30 Jan 2007 Source: Cumberland Times-News (MD) Contact: 2007 Cumberland Times-News Website: http://www.times-news.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1365 Author: Dave Crockett U.S. STILL LACKS RATIONAL, COST-EFFECTIVE APPROACH TO DRUG USE The world owes no man freedom from strife, so we should have reason to think that the establishment of laws will not contribute to our daily woes. Unfortunately our good English Christian cousins passed down to us as much prudish law as prudence. The upshot being that we are strapped with a schizophrenic and archaic criminal justice system. Seeing that calls for resolution to the "drug problem" continue, as writers in the Times-News often refer to it, many people misdirect their proposed solutions to criminal justice alone, heedless of alternative perspectives. Murder, rape, DUI, spousal abuse, arson, etc., is wrong per se, whether a legislative body labels it wrong or not. The Latin phrase "malum in se" is an act that is wrong because it is inherently wrong in itself. This concept was used to develop the various common law crimes, laws that were based on common sense. Prostitution, drug use, consensual sex, buying liquor on Sunday, etc., is not inherently wrong, but is a crime only because some group or legislative body says it is. "Malum prohibitum" is an act that is wrong because it is prohibited, not because it is innately wrong. These are acts that are neither necessarily immoral nor hurtful, but merely wrong by arbitrary decree. This concept is used, in part, to develop victimless crimes. These are laws that are based on the views of judgmental people, and by many who have this creepy notion that they need to treat other adults as if they were children. This enforced moralizing creates a failure of wisdom to establish an open society of standards that allows for freedom of adult choice. Many who clamor for punishment disapprove of some choices, or acts, that are simply personal behavior, not criminal intent. Thus, this draconian approach leads to a host of social conflicts: Gangs, unlicensed drug dealing, corruption, burglary, drug abuse, poverty, etc. Undoubtedly earthly creatures have long consumed drugs for medicinal, recreational and spiritual uses. The fact that we take drugs for fun stands above the debate. You see, it's biological and getting "high" has been with us since our dawn of time. Consequently, it isn't a question of how we stop it, or even decree that it is wrong. It is a question of how we regulate and license any intoxicant for an "adult" purchasing market. But since some of us have created an artificial edifice of legal versus illegal, quite naturally there will be an official wall intended to divide and conquer adult behavior. Sadly, we are unable to deal with adult drug use in a way that is rational and cost effective. So we start a war with ourselves and like any other war we have casualties and collateral damage that beg the question: Why are adults fighting over drugs? Not to protect the children, surely. After all, if you want to send the right message to kids, wouldn't you want adults to set a good example with resolutions that are peaceful? With behavior that is moderate? Is exposing kids to the violence and excesses of war and gangs really done in their best interest? An anonymous ancient once said this about society's ills, "If there be a pox upon the house you built, censor none but yourselves." Evidently the kingdoms of legal and Illegal are chockfull of self-interested motives, and they are related. Many people who want drugs illegal, and the dealers who sell them, both benefit from the same thing: Profiteering in one form or the other! And, since adult consumers are only doing what comes naturally to them, both parties are guilty of wanting to perpetuate their ill-begotten goods at the expense of a biologically driven mass-market of adult consumers. It's no wonder then that criminal justice is bigger than General Motors. Dave Crockett Cumberland - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake