Pubdate: Sun, 29 Apr 2007 Source: Trentonian, The (NJ) Copyright: 2007 The Trentonian Contact: http://www.trentonian.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1006 Author: Annette H. Lartigue A FUTILE DRUG WAR "The war against drugs provides us with something to say that offends nobody, requires us to do nothing difficult, and allows us to postpone, perhaps indefinitely, the more urgent questions about the state of the nation's schools, housing, employment opportunities--the conditions to which drug addiction speaks as a symptom, not a cause. We remain safe in the knowledge that we might as well be denouncing Satan, and so we can direct the voices of prerecorded blame at metaphors and apparitions, wars and battles. The war on drugs becomes a perfect war for people who would rather not fight.It is a war in which we position ourselves to stand fearlessly on the side of good. We need do nothing else but strike noble poses as protectors of the people and defenders of the public trust. We continue to lock up nonviolent offenders, we feel better and we accomplish nothing. We can not allow this to continue. We currently have millions of non-violent drug-law violators behind bars or on supervised release, Millions. We have become the world's leading jailer becoming what was most despised about Soviet Russia during the Cold War. We pressure the countries of the world to adopt out failed policy or else . . . . Many of our federal prisons are holding twice their capacity. Our federal government alone operates 132 prisons and camps. Fifteen are under construction right now with twelve more on the drawing board. When these are open they will need 50 more, and then 70, and 90 after that ... In effect our federal government alone must build an 832-bed facility every two weeks just to keep up with the punishment of non-violent crime! The cost in dollars is staggering; the cost in lives is immeasurable. Prison in America is not a place of rehabilitation. It is a place of violence, humiliation, despair, and deprivation. All of this we support in the name of justice. All of this human destruction in a futile war against substances. Inhuman lengths of incarceration have done nothing to stem the flow of drugs. A recent study proved that it only increases it. Yet we continue to build prisons instead of building schools, and places for effective drug treatment. Why? It is time to revisit and rethink our war on drugs. It has to include a war against poverty, poor schools, underemployment, lack of employment, teenage pregnancy, absent non-supporting parents and homelessness. Annette H. Lartigue Trenton The writer is a member of Trenton City Council. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake