Pubdate: Thu, 07 May 2009 Source: News-Sentinel, The (Fort Wayne, IN) Copyright: 2009 The News-Sentinel Contact: http://www.fortwayne.com/mld/fortwayne/contact_us/feedback_np1/ Website: http://www.fortwayne.com/mld/newssentinel/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1077 Author: Bob Rinearson WAR ON DRUGS IMPORTANT TO NATION'S FUTURE, AND WORTH EVERY DIME SPENT "A lot of good has come from drugs. I think 'Penny Lane' is worth 10 dead kids. 'Dark Side of the Moon' is worth 100 dead kids. Because a lot of kids wouldn't even be born if it weren't for that album, so it evens out." - Bill Maher Jeffery Miron is a senior lecturer in economics at Harvard University. It certainly seems lately that when someone associated with Harvard speaks we all should listen, since Harvard knows what's best for America. In a recent article for CNN Politics.Com, "Legalize drugs to stop violence," Miron makes the argument that "Escalation (in the war on drugs) is the wrong response." And it's not just marijuana he wants to see decriminalized; Miron wants "legalization for all drugs." Among his many points of debate, Miron says, "Prohibition is a drain on the public purse," claiming that instead of the millions of dollars the U.S. government spends each year on the "war on drugs," monies could be regained by legalization, regulation and taxation. As with any opinion I offer, 90 percent of my argument comes from experience in working with at-risk kids. My apologies; I'm neither educated enough nor in a position lofty enough to base my opinions on simply theories and philosophies. I read a lot. But nothing could come close to the education I've received from what I've seen for myself. Of course, that doesn't mean I won't use statistics to support my positions. I'm sure there are thousands who share Miron's views, although I'm equally sure of mine for different reasons. As far as the public purse statement goes, I wonder how that plays into the state of drug usage among the young and its impact on education. There are few teachers who teach at the middle and high school levels who have not witnessed a student who once showed promise turn into a Hyde-like figure whose interest in academics has been replaced with indifference, thanks to drugs. As reported in Journal Watch Psychiatry in 2007, 44 percent of high school seniors reported using marijuana. Between 1992 and 2006, marijuana usage increased 4 percent to 7 percent among eighth-graders. As also reported, 49.6 percent of seniors reported they could obtain amphetamines easily, 47.1 percent could get cocaine and 25.1 percent felt they could score crystal meth just as easily. Miron says prohibition harms public health by denying marijuana to "patients suffering from cancer, glaucoma and other conditions." Interesting, considering that more recent and in-depth research reports that "marijuana has more cancer-causing agents than is found in tobacco smoke." Furthermore, other findings are showing drug usage, in particular marijuana, may have serious negative impacts on an adolescent's sexual development. The good professor also compares today's drug war to Prohibition during the Great Depression, citing, "Violence was common in the alcohol industry when it was banned during Prohibition, but not before and not after." In America today, 50 percent of homicides and 40 percent of assaults are alcohol-related. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, "The leading cause (of death) for teens and young adults is auto accidents related to alcohol." I guess it depends on where one goes looking for violence. I looked up Miron's bio. Part of it says, "His area of expertise is the economics of libertarianism, with particular emphasis on the economics of illegal drugs." So what it appears to come down to is Miron wants to take money from the drug dealers' pockets and put it in the pockets of the politicians. Please don't embarrass me and ask me whom I would trust more. As with any public debate, especially when the debate has to do with vice, all arguments that focus on the impact on younger generations tend to get lost. Any war America has fought usually is to preserve the future of the nation. I would argue that the war on drugs has every bit as much to do with this nation's future and is worth every dime. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom