Pubdate: Fri, 03 Apr 2009 Source: Daily Texan (U of TX at Austin, Edu) Copyright: 2009 Daily Texan Contact: http://www.dailytexanonline.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/115 Author: Merrit Martin Note: Martin is a Spanish and religious studies sophomore. Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/mexico YOU AND THE DRUG WAR Upwards of 6,300 people were killed last year in Mexico due to the violence of drug cartels, and since the beginning of 2009 there have been at least 15 drug-related deaths per day in Ciudad Juarez. The city has become one of the most dangerous on the Mexican border, according to a March 23 Reuters article. Even though both Mexican and U.S. governments have increased the presence of law enforcement along the border, the violence continues. Increasing efforts to enforce drug abstinence is a short-term solution to the war on drugs. For addicts, stopping drug use isn't a viable option without support and rehabilitation, and as long as addicts and occasional or social drug users demand drugs, drug cartels will be ready to supply. Though I don't believe drug use is necessarily immoral or unethical, consuming an unnecessary product that is produced in an unethical way certainly is. Quitting will require some sacrifice, but just as clothing consumers are indicted by the abuses of sweatshops and meat-eaters are indicted by the horrors of factory farms, drug users are indicted by the violence in Mexico and other countries around the world. As Hillary Clinton rightly admitted on her recent trip to Mexico, the U.S. demand for drugs fuels the trade and adds to the conflict and suffering. So unless you know for a fact that your weed is produced, transported and sold peacefully, there could very well be blood on your hands. The least you can do is stop using for now. However, legalization is the only long-term solution. According to the 2006 National Household Survey on Drug Use and Health, about 15 percent of all Americans surveyed reported drug use in the past year, and 8 percent had used drugs in the past month. It is unreasonable to think that law enforcement and public service announcements alone are enough to stop this widespread use. The Economist noted in a March 5 article that "there is no correlation between the harshness of drug laws and the incidence of drug-taking: citizens living under tough regimes (notably America but also Britain) take more drugs, not fewer." Additionally, Carson B. Wagner, a UT assistant advertising professor, found that anti-drug ads that the U.S. spends hundreds of millions of dollars on per year actually make teens more interested in trying drugs. As much as we might like to get everyone off drugs, the government's best efforts are not working. The solution is not more of the same. Legalization would end the drug wars by allowing the drug trade to operate freely and openly. The industry would be subject to regulation and taxation, and the government could use the tax revenues to fund drug education, treatment facilities and programs to make drug use safer for addicts, such as the distribution of clean needles. As long as tax rates and regulations were not so onerous as to encourage the development of black markets, legalization would eliminate the terror now inflicted by cartels and drug lords. Overall drug use might increase, but as The Economist pointed out, that seems unlikely. People do not have a sacred right to take recreational drugs, but they do have a right to live. The current prohibition on drug use is deadly. It's time for people -- legislators and consumers alike -- to take a new stance on drugs -- one that keeps the welfare of others in mind. Martin is a Spanish and religious studies sophomore. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin