Pubdate: Fri, 30 Mar 2007 Source: Daily Toreador, The (Texas Tech, TX Edu) Copyright: 2007 Daily Toreado Contact: http://www.dailytoreador.com/home/lettertotheeditor/ Website: http://www.dailytoreador.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3949 Author: William Harman Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Marijuana) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) 'WAR ON DRUGS' NEEDS MORE COMPETENT POLICIES Competent policies on drug use are becoming increasingly important in modern society. Because of advances in organic chemistry and the globalization of the world economy, people are gaining greater access to a larger number of mind-altering substances. Creating a sensible system of regulation is necessary to combat the harmful effects these drugs can have. When trying to formulate potential policy, however, one unalterable fact must be taken into account. People always have had and always will have a desire to experiment with altered states of consciousness. This desire is innate to the functioning of the human brain, and no governmental policy will change that. The universality of this is apparent in that every society and culture in the world has known drug users. It is a fact people are going to want to try mind-altering substances. People worldwide will find access to various types of drugs. One drug, alcohol, has been part of human culture for thousands of years, and eliminating it in the modern era proved all but impossible. In current U.S. drug policy, most mind-altering substances are illegal, and violators are subject to harsh penalties. The goal of this policy is to reduce the number of harmful drug users and to alleviate the negative social consequences of drug use. Many instances exist that legitimize having this goal because some drugs are destructive to the people who use them and to society. Despite this, our current policy has undesirable social consequences as bad as or worse than the problems drug addicts cause directly. Organized crime is the inevitable and unavoidable consequence of America's current policy. Many individuals exist - and will always exist - who are willing, though illegally and at a cost, to experience the drug high. This creates a huge financial incentive for people to smuggle and sell drugs. Competition between different organized groups, as well as with the government, can and does lead to violent crime. Another problem with the current system is because the drug market operates illegally, it is unregulated and these drugs are not held to the quality standards to which legal pharmaceuticals are subject. Poor-quality drugs can have a very damaging affect on users' bodies. There is a better way to reduce the number of drug users in this country, and it does not involve illegalizing drugs. Look at Amsterdam, Netherlands, as a model of competent drug policy. It is easy to see even though many drugs are more accessible there than in the United States, countries like the Netherlands have significantly fewer problems with drug-related crime and have a smaller percentage of drug users. According to the U.S. Department of Health and Public Services, in 2001, 36.9 percent of people in the United States 12 years old and older had experimented with marijuana, and 5.4 percent had used it in the past month. According to the Trimbos Institute, in 2001, 17 percent of people in the Netherlands 12 years old and older had experimented with marijuana, and 3 percent had used it in the past month. Similar trends exist for other drugs like heroin and cocaine. One aspect of Amsterdam's strategy comes in the form of separating the markets for hard and soft drugs. Marijuana, alcohol and other "soft-drugs" are widely available. People who casually use these soft drugs have to go out of their way to find dealers of harder drugs. This effectively limits the myth of the gateway drug. Programs of support and rehabilitation are also widely available for hard-drug users in an effort to educate, cure addiction and eventually reintegrate users back into society. In the United States, all soft drugs, such as marijuana, should be legalized to separate the larger markets for these drugs from the markets for harder drugs like heroin and cocaine. In addition to replicating the effects of easy access in Amsterdam, this significantly would reduce the amount of money drug dealers would be able to make and thus limit the amount of organized crime. Another competent policy is the decriminalization of all drugs. People who use drugs do not directly hurt other people with their drug use. They do not belong in prisons with rapists and murderers. To put them in prison is cruel and unusual punishment. More importantly, decriminalization in Amsterdam did not result in higher rates of use for any drug. The billions of dollars spent on the failed, impossible-to-win and increasingly difficult "War on Drugs" should be reallocated to an expansive support system to educate and rehabilitate drug users. We should persuade the people to stay drug-free and help those who want to clean up. We should not strip them of their freedom to make their own choices and exact cruel and unusual punishments to people who have done nothing to harm anyone. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake