Pubdate: Mon, 07 Apr 2008 Source: Argus Leader (Sioux Falls, SD) Copyright: 2008 Argus Leader Contact: http://www.argusleader.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/842 Author: Tony Ryan LEGALIZING DRUGS WILL REMOVE PROFIT, STIGMA The March 2 article in the Argus Leader about meth labs - "Buyer beware: Labs leave toxic legacy" - details more malfunctions of our failed drug policy. I'm a former police officer, and I believe we've created the problem of meth-contaminated homes by making this drug illegal. In fact, most of our current drug woes have been created specifically because of our prohibition-style drug policies. How can a former cop blame our drug woes on the policies aimed at stopping the scourge of drugs? Let's examine the facts. No city in our country is drug-free. Our prisons aren't drug-free. How can we expect our children's schools or our communities to be drug-free? In fact, many larger cities are plagued with violence from drug-dealing gangs and criminal syndicates. If the war on drugs was successful, South Dakotans wouldn't be concerned about chemical contamination in their homes from former meth labs. After 38 years, $1 trillion spent and a prison population that now exceeds 2.3 million people (the largest in the world - both in total and per capita), the U.S. is further from our drug-free goal than when we began. And home-grown meth labs have been disappearing in South Dakota and elsewhere like sprayed thistles in soybeans. Most meth now comes from Mexico, is twice as potent, and those dealers don't tolerate competition very well. We must admit our beloved war on drugs is a failure and consciously change our direction. As shocking as it might sound, I believe the most reasonable course to take is to legalize all drugs. By re-legalizing those few substances now illegal, we immediately remove the drug dealers' profit and stigma of addiction that hinders addicts from seeking treatment. We also free up police resources better spent on pursuing real crimes and criminals. Remember when South Dakota worried about commodity prices and not meth labs? Legalizing and regulating drugs will eliminate meth labs, allow our doctors to help addicts instead of turning them in to the police and allow the police to chase criminals who burglarize and assault us. Legalization is not a radical idea. It is a common-sense solution to a problem of our own creation. Prohibition is chaos. Legalization means regulation and control. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek