Pubdate: Tue, 10 Feb 2009 Source: Collegiate Times (VA Tech, Edu) Copyright: 2009 Collegiate Times Contact: http://www.collegiatetimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/699 Author: Kris Reinertson PHELPS INHALED-THAT WAS THE POINT In response to the Dallas Morning News editorial "Phelps, pot and dealing with the consequences" published in Thursday's Collegiate Times, I wish to provide the missing link between "pot smokers like Michael Phelps" and "innocent Mexicans killed by drug cartels" that the editorial board chose to leave absent. At Virginia Tech's Public Forum on Alcohol and Other Drug Policies last October, a cadet student posited that I and all the students who advocate for change of our Zero Tolerance drug policy are not proud to be Hokies. While I respect that he came forward and shared his views, I cannot help but think that he and the Dallas Morning News editor are missing the same common point: that policies can be improved and that our current drug policies are broken. When I purchase my morning cup of coffee -- which usually turns into four to six cups with free-refills -- I sometimes tease the barista that she is my drug-dealer. Sometimes she plays along and says, "Yeah, that's right, show me the money." This is satire because she really is my drug dealer; coffee really is a drug, and I really am addicted to it. Yet, if the DEA came in and busted the ABP cart, would I stop drinking coffee? No. I would purchase it from one of the other five coffee shops on campus or walk a block downtown. Similarly, if one drug cartel is busted, then another will fill the demand; and if Michael Phelps' pot dealer is busted, then he will buy drugs elsewhere. The editorial board of the Dallas Morning News writes, "The fates (of Michael Phelps using pot and innocent Mexicans killed by drug cartels) are not easily separated," yet the author takes extraordinary lengths to do so by not realizing the context of prohibition. At Virginia Tech alone, more than 9,000 current students have reported using marijuana. To expect that all Americans will suddenly raise their consumer consciousness and halt their use for the sake of moral opposition to the brutality done by drug cartels is simply not practical. Meanwhile, Texas state legislators recently warned the city council of El Paso, Texas, that its funding would be cut off if it did not reverse its unanimous vote calling for national debate on drug legalization, a resolution in support of their violence-ridden, border-city Ciudad Juarez. This proves the undemocratic lengths our politicians are willing to take to silence the growing support for alternatives to drug prohibition. Kris Reinertson Senior, sociology and political science - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom