Pubdate: Thu, 2 Apr 2009 Source: Macon County News (NC) Contact: 2009 Macon County News Website: http://www.maconnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/5000 Author: Bob Scott, Community Columnist TAKING THE PROFIT OUT OF ILLEGAL DRUGS A child is only a potential customer to a drug dealer. A drug dealer does not care what a child's aspirations are, a child's hopes or dreams, or a child's potential. All a drug dealer cares about is the money they can squeeze out of every child they enslave on illegal drugs. The reality, which is not being faced by politicians, is that until we take the profits out of drug dealing, we will never stop illegal drugs. But this will never happen as long as we continue our current drug policy, "the war on drugs." Prohibition of any addictive substance has never worked. Remember prohibition, when authorities cracked down on alcohol from 1920-1933? Bootlegging, gangsters, speakeasies, territorial wars, shootings and human casualties were the outcome. Prohibition didn't work then and does not work today. For example, if we outlaw and demonize tobacco and alcohol as we do illegal drugs, the criminal elements will move in and their cartels will make fortunes black-marketing these substances. For nearly four decades we have poured over a trillion dollars into the "war on drugs" and have had 37 million arrests for nonviolent drug offenses. Yet drug trafficking continues to increase. The Obama administration even recently declared that Mexican drug cartels are no longer just a criminal issue. Now the White House considers these organizations and gangs a serious threat to national security. Any child's future can be ruined by one mistake experimenting with an illegal drug, getting arrested, and then having to live with a criminal record. Drug addiction should not be a crime. It is a health issue. Law Enforcement Against Prohibition (LEAP) puts it this way. "Every year we choose to continue this war will cost U.S. taxpayers another 69 billion dollars. Despite all the lives we have destroyed and all the money so ill spent, today illicit drugs are cheaper, more potent, and far easier to get than they were 35 years ago at the beginning of the war on drugs. Meanwhile, people continue dying in our streets while drug barons and terrorists continue to grow richer than ever before. We would suggest that this scenario must be the very definition of a failed public policy." When a person becomes addicted, the drug dealer begins squeezing the victim for more money. When the victim's money runs out, the victim resorts to crime. Many female victims resort to prostitution. The drug dealer buys weapons and goes to war against his/her competition. The drug dealers buy off law enforcement or at least try to. Most corruption in law enforcement stems from the drug trade. The cycle continues-- more drugs, more crime. America's insatiable appetite for illegal drugs is funding drug cartels in Mexico, which are threatening to turn that country into a failed state. Mexican drug wars are spilling over into the United States. Heroin traffickers bankroll the Taliban in Afghanistan, whose religious terrorists vow to kill our troops. Drug cartels worldwide have more military resources than many third-world countries. South American countries are constantly under the threat of de-stabilization from drug lords who are as powerful as governments. In the United States, we have seen overkill in the rise of paramilitary police raids, which threaten our civil liberties under the guise of the war on drugs. We cannot afford to lose our rights under the Fourth Amendment which guard us against unreasonable searches and seizures, further damaging our democracy. The only way we can break this cycle is to face reality and legalize drugs. This would involve sensibly regulating and controlling drugs and establishing a network of treatment centers. More importantly, it would take the profits out of the drug trafficking. We tax tobacco products and alcohol and they are addictive substances. But we don't have people committing nearly as much crime to get these substances as we do from those who are addicted to illegal drugs. If there are no profits, illegal drug traffickers have no incentive to continue hooking our children. And treatment is far less expensive than prison. We have many people addicted to alcohol and tobacco, but since it is taxed, controlled and regulated, we don't find people robbing and stealing to support their addiction as we do from those addicted to illegal drugs. We no longer jail alcoholics unless they are a threat to themselves or others. We can get a handle on the drug problem. But we must change our attitude toward enforcement, legalization and treatment. Building more prisons to house non-violent drug offenders has become one of our fastest growing industries, but the cost of housing a prisoner in one of our prisons is now $20,000 to $30,000 a year. It is cheaper to enroll in one of America's prestigious universities than to keep a prisoner in jail for a year. Politicians need to face the reality that what we are doing in the insane "war on drugs" is not working. Legalization and decriminalization of the drug problem may or may not be the answer. It is time to admit that what we have been doing for over thirty years has not worked. Legalization and treatment programs need to be given a chance. The public-- and taxpayers-- continue to suffer from the policies of the "war on drugs" while the drug cartels, gangs and dealers thrive. Politicians must face this reality. Bob Scott is a former newspaper reporter and officer of the law. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake