Pubdate: Sun, 08 Mar 2009 Source: Tribune Review (Pittsburgh, PA) Copyright: 2009 Tribune-Review Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.pittsburghlive.com/x/pittsburghtrib/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/460 Author: Steven Greenhut Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/mexico Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization) PROHIBITION, THE SEQUEL When it comes to foreign affairs, Americans are used to debating progress or setbacks in the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan or the recent Israeli invasion of the Gaza Strip. We're used to thinking about death and destruction thousands of miles from home and, as a result, we tend to debate these matters based more on glancing impressions drawn from newspapers, television or Web sites rather than personal knowledge or the knowledge of people who live in war zones. But what if I mentioned that thousands of people have been killed -- 7,337 at last count -- since 2007 in open warfare along our own southern border? What if I added that, because of this war, we place our lives in jeopardy by simply visiting some of our favorite vacation spots? Would that cause you to think twice about your foreign-policy priorities? I am referring, of course, to Mexico, which has turned into a bloody horror show in the past couple of years. There's been sporadic news coverage of these events. But the average American -- and the average politician, for that matter -- doesn't seem attuned or interested in a human tragedy that's starting to spill not just across the border, but deeply into the American interior, to cities such as Dallas, Atlanta and Sioux Falls, S.D., where Mexican drug gangs have murdered and abducted people. Here in Southern California, I still receive many phone calls and e-mails from readers upset about the "Mexican" situation. But they aren't talking about the beheadings, murders, kidnappings, assassinations of newspaper editors, gunfights in town squares between drug lords and the military, killings of bystanders and children, or about the huge numbers of Mexican police who work for the cartels. No, they are referring to the immigration situation, and they generally are upset at the number of Mexican nationals who come north mainly to escape grueling poverty. But, as former House Speaker Newt Gingrich pointed out at a recent speech to an Orange County trade association, there isn't a wall big enough to keep out the nasty problems now destroying Mexico. Americans need to think more broadly about this matter. Since hearing Gingrich, I've been reading about, and fuming over, these horrors. American policy -- in particular, the federal government's insistence on funding and fighting a drug war here and in pushing the Mexican government to battle the drug cartels down south -- has exacerbated the carnage in Mexico. That's not to reduce the responsibility of the evil folks committing evil acts. But as Ted Galen Carpenter of the libertarian Cato Institute explained in a 2008 article for the National Interest, "U.S. policy seems to assume that if the Mexican government can eliminate the top drug lords, their organizations will fall apart, thereby greatly reducing the flow of illegal drugs to the United States." But Carpenter notes that cutting off the head of one drug Hydra leads only to more heads sprouting. He gets to the real problem: "If Washington continues to pursue a prohibitionist strategy, which creates the enormous black-market profits in drug trafficking, violence and corruption will become a dominant and permanent feature of Mexican life." Unfortunately, not many Americans on the political Left or Right are willing to even discuss the real answer, which is the decriminalization of drugs. Indeed, it's hard to even get any support for the modest goal of allowing people to sell small amounts of marijuana to terminally ill people. Yet it's the illegality of drugs that makes them so lucrative and which assures that only the most vicious gangsters will thrive as the price goes ever higher. Americans need to stop being so childish about drug issues. Yes, drugs are bad, but some people will always use them. Government cannot stop this desire, and government interdiction efforts only succeed in raising the price of the contraband, which leads to an even bigger reason to violently fight it out over the market. It provides the money needed to buy off cops and corrupt an entire justice system. We don't see Budweiser dealers shooting it out on Main Street with Miller dealers to control the beer trade. That's because beer sales are legal. That may seem absurd, but consider that the same sort of battles being fought over drug turf today took place in the United States between bootleggers when alcohol was illegal in the 1920s and early 1930s. "During Prohibition, there were undoubtedly people ... claiming 'Booze consumption is down. We're winning the war on booze. Al Capone is in jail. We've got to keep on waging the war on booze until we can declare final victory,' " wrote Jacob Hornberger, president of the free-market Future of Freedom Foundation. "Fortunately," Hornberger continued, "Americans living at that time finally saw through such nonsense, especially given the massive Prohibition-related violent crime that the war on booze had spawned. They were right to finally legalize the manufacture and sale of alcohol and treat alcohol consumption as a social issue, not a criminal-justice problem." If Americans can't figure out that the drug war is no different from the booze war, then we are destined to read more headlines such as these, which were taken from recent newspaper articles: "Mexican drug violence spills over into the U.S."; "Bloodshed on the Border: Life in Juarez, where drug violence has created the equivalent of a failed state on our doorstep"; and "Mexican police linked to rising kidnappings." I think back to ancient history -- the early days of the Bush administration. Our new president touted America's special relationship with Mexico and met several times with then-Mexican President Vicente Fox in an effort to bring about a more open border and better relationships between our two democracies. The issues of the time -- illegal immigration, Bush's proposed guest-worker program and the plan to make it easier for Mexican trucks to travel into the United States -- were contentious, but seem like minor-league stuff compared to today's goings-on. Now Tijuana and even Rosarito Beach are war zones. This is from the L.A. Times in October: "As Tijuana's latest flare-up in the drug war rages into its fifth week, with the death toll approaching 150, violence is permeating everyday life here, causing widespread fear, altering people's habits and exposing the city's youngest to carnage." I'd hate to think of this going on for years, but it probably will. The root of the problem -- drug prohibition -- seems obvious, but for some reason Americans and Mexicans are unwilling to consider an end to it. But even if few people are willing to discuss the solution, it's high time that Americans pay more attention to this problem. Steven Greenhut is an editorial writer and columnist with the Orange County Register. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin