Pubdate: Fri, 24 Apr 2009 Source: Bennington Banner (VT) Copyright: 2009 by MediaNews Group, Inc. Contact: http://www.benningtonbanner.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2424 Author: Kevin McDonald Note: Kevin McDonald lives in Bennington. A BAD DRUG DEAL ALL AROUND We're far away from it here in the Northeast, but if you pay any attention to national news you'll know that Mexico is rapidly falling into chaos with drug gangs taking over. Murdering judges, policemen, and their competitors; kidnapping their family members to intimidate and coerce them. Where are the AK-47s and other weapons coming from? The good ole US of A, thanks to the National Rifle Association and weak-kneed politicians. Sadly, I have to include President Obama in that last category. After a recent meeting with the Mexican president, Mr. Obama spoke of the tragedy in Mexico and of America's role in stoking it -- with our demand for their drugs and as a supplier of guns. Yet he promised to combat it by enforcing laws currently on the books, and said he would not pursue a resurrection of the assault weapons ban that was rolled back in 2004. He admitted that the politics of that was too tough. I would have expected more from him. Despite the lobbying clout of the NRA, I think most Americans realize that an assault weapons ban would not hamper deer hunters, rabbit hunters, or folks who feel that they need a gun to protect the homestead. In the wake of a spate of recent multiple shootings -- policemen in Pittsburgh, immigrants in Binghamton, and with the anniversaries this month of the Columbine and Virginia Tech carnage as a reminder, you might expect to find a wellspring of public support for more sanity in our gun laws. But guns are only part of the equation in the Mexican tragedy. Demand for drugs is the other part. These gangster wars are over control of the drug exporting business. Fifteen years or so after NAFTA, marijuana is Mexico's largest export to the U.S. Our demand for the weed is fueling the descent into chaos there. That chaos is spilling over into Arizona (Phoenix now has the highest kidnapping rate in the country), Texas, New Mexico, and California. The scourge of drugs has been a problem in the U.S. for a long time. Decades ago it was less visible, more confined to the ghetto. Less mainstream. Now it's everywhere. It hurts not only those who use, and their families. It hurts society by breeding and feeding the criminal element. Mexico is an extreme example. Locally, maybe it's an addict breaking into your car to afford the next fix. But it touches us all. Some, even conservatives (William F. Buckley, for example) have argued for legalization of marijuana. They urge making it legal and taxable, like alcohol. During Probibition, alcohol fueled mob violence for control of that franchise, not unlike what we are seeing in Mexico (if on a smaller scale). Arguing against legalization of pot because of its detrimental effects is hard to do while alcohol is legal; and misused, alcohol certainly causes ravages of its own. But I'm not willing to go there yet. Maybe I've been brainwashed, but I do think there's a difference between the two. In college I saw habitual pot-heads totally lose any ambition. Yet, I also saw drunk frat boys acting like jerks. And this area has had no shortage of alcohol-related auto tragedies. So if alcohol is legal, should pot be? Looking at the question pragmatically, is legal and controlled a better solution than outlawed and lucrative for criminals? This at least deserves an intelligent discussion. In the meantime, if you're a user think about this: That bag you buy has at least some small link to those Mexican gangsters, some small connection to the judges and cops they murder. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake