Pubdate: Fri, 10 Sep 2010 Source: State Journal, The (WV) Copyright: 2010 The State Journal Contact: http://www.statejournal.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2745 FEDERAL MONEY FOR LOCAL DRUG WARS Kentucky's two illustrious candidates for the Senate seat to be vacated by Jim Bunning, Mr. Paul and Mr. Conway, are arguing over financing the War on Drugs. Mr. Paul says that Federal money should not be given to the states to fight what is essentially a local problem. Mr. Conway believes that the War on Drugs cannot be fought on the local level without Federal help. That Federal support for local drug task forces is key in fighting the war. The reality is our approach to drugs and substance abuse has not recorded one successful year in which drug use has declined since outright prohibition became Government policy. President Nixon appointed a commission to study the drug problem and make recommendations on what to do about it and then rejected the commissions findings and declared the War On Drugs. Since then numerous studies have repeatedly shown that the most successful policies are those based on harm reduction. This type of policy has been successful in those countries bold enough to try them and seems , in the eyes of doctors, law enforcement people and forward thinking politicians, to be the one that holds the greatest chance for resolving the problems associated with drug abuse. Sadly, neither Mr. Conway nor Mr. Paul are willing to recognize that harm reduction policies work. They are perfectly happy to continue following the 1914 Harrison Act blueprint of arrest ( over 800,000 citizens were arrested in 2009), incarceration, maybe rehab and back to the community to do it all over again. Conway favors more money, Paul less, but still more of the same, arrest conviction, release. What Kentucky and the Nation needs are legislators who are willing to admit that our current drug policies are a failure. Legislators who accept the scientific facts regarding our drug problem and are willing to propose workable solutions. It is said that insanity is doing the same thing over and over and expecting a different result. Based on this it's obvious our current policies do not work, never will, and it is insane to keep thinking that if we pursue these failed policies with more money, more cops, and more arrests that they will somehow work. To think this way is to rely on faith, not science. Drug prohibition is not religion, although some prohibitionists act like it is, and in order for us to be successful in confronting drug abuse we must at long last discard faith and rely on science to show us the way. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake