Pubdate: Mon, 21 Jul 2008 Source: Hawaii Tribune Herald (Hilo, HI) Copyright: 2008 Hawaii Tribune Herald Contact: http://www.hawaiitribune-herald.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/185 Author: Rick Damerville Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v08.n699.a02.html FLAWED DRUG HISTORY You are right, Mr. Givens, I do not remember Prohibition. I can remember gas when it was 23 cents per gallon and cigarettes when they were 17 cents a pack in the post exchange. And I can remember when mothers with young children could not buy formula or diapers on credit at the commissary but their husbands could buy all the booze and cigarettes they wanted on credit at the post exchange. And I can remember when sailors could light up in closed quarters aboard ships and submarines, and nonsmokers just had to put up with it. So you see, Mr. Givens, while I don't remember Prohibition, I am older than dirt. I have attended many forums concerning drug laws and have spoken at a few. At one such forum, a man of average height stood up and announced: "I am 38 years old, I have been smoking pakalolo every day since I was 13 years of age, and I am the best basketball player that I know." My response: "Either you do not know anyone, or you are living proof that marijuana causes delusions." Mr. Givens, your statement that the drug laws in this country were enacted when "addicts worked regular jobs, raised decent families and were indistinguishable from teetotalers. There were no drug gangs and no international cartels and no real problem with drug addiction," is an equally delusional statement and totally unsupported by historical fact. Prohibition was way ahead of its time because there were too many drinkers in this country. In 1960, if our elected officials had decided to ban cigarette smoking in public buildings and restaurants and bars, in prisons, and aboard ships, those laws, like Prohibition, would have failed. They certainly appear to be succeeding today. In 1604, King James I published "Counterblaste to Tobacco," in which he warned his subjects to ignore the blandishments of many that smoking tobacco would ward off smallpox, influenza and the plague. He said that common sense should tell them that inhaling stinking smoke into their lungs would be injurious to their health. Four hundred years later, we are still dealing with the human misery caused by tobacco. Common sense should tell everyone that inhaling stinking smoke -- whether it be from tobacco, marijuana, methamphetamine or cocaine -- is bad for your health. Yes, if all drugs were legal, it is true their would be no "drug crimes." And if their were no tax laws, there would be no tax crimes. If there were no social welfare programs, there would be no welfare fraud. The list is endless. It is the duty of our elected officials to protect public health when they can. Reasonable people can differ about whether a particular sentence in a particular case is reasonable or not. No one can successfully argue that legalizing every drug known to mankind is the cure for all the ills in society. Rick Damerville Hilo - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin