Pubdate: Sun, 19 Dec 2010 Source: Asheville Citizen-Times (NC) Copyright: 2010 Asheville Citizen-Times Contact: http://www.citizen-times.com/contact/letters.shtml Website: http://www.citizen-times.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/863 Author: Carl Mumpower Note: Carl Mumpower is a practicing psychologist and a former U.S. congressional candidate and Asheville city council member. Contact him at thecandidconservative.com. Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/opinion.htm (Opinion) WAR ON DRUGS HAS TO BE WON AT HOME America's drug war is an abysmal failure. Like all foreign entanglements, it finds us arrogantly pretending to fix other countries while stumbling to manage our own. Success will not be found in Mexican border towns, Colombian jungles, or Afghan poppy fields. We will win or lose right here at home. A search for solutions begins with a commitment to liberty versus freedom. Liberty is freedom seasoned with accountability. One does not work without the other - which is precisely why drug legalization fails. Putting Mexico's narco-terrorists, our street dealers, the DEA, and a host of attorneys out of business has appeal. It remains that today's recreational drugs are too powerful to manage - legal or not. Experience in our own homes and in countries like Holland and Portugal confirm that drug users, over time, become addicted devotees to their needs and indifferent to everyone else's. Yes, marijuana is less harmful than alcohol. It is also much easier to hide, psychologically addictive, demotivating, and cognitively harmful. In our dangerous and competitive world, expediency is a poor argument for social endorsement of another personal intoxication tool. The fact that so few adult users want their own children to smoke marijuana speaks most clearly to where we should land on this issue. No one was ever lifted to a better place by getting high. Misuse of drugs, prescribed or not, is a reliable slide to job problems, domestic violence, child abuse, personal disintegration, and health issues funded by someone besides the user. Asheville is an enabling haven for a blooming drug culture. Whether co-funding 28,000 recent narco-deaths in Mexico, corrupting our young and vulnerable by example and recruitment, or poisoning public housing and poor neighborhoods, each and every participant has bloody hands. A shamefully inflated hard drug treatment success rate offers further pause. ABC's report of the long-term salvaging of one in four is generous. This psychologist agrees with those suggesting one in ten is more truthful. Winning the drug war requires holding users, dealers and co-conspirators accountable. A criminal justice system characterized by constant delays, selective enforcement, plea bargain rates of ninety-five plus percent, and an absence of alternative sentencing and treatment interventions is set up to fail. Realistic success potentials rest firmly on curtailing the recruitment of new users. That requires prompt and creative consequence for drug trade at any level. Right thinkers recognize legalization as surrender. Loving cultures do not sacrifice their children for convenience... - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake