Pubdate: Sat, 22 Jan 2011 Source: Columbia Daily Tribune (MO) Page: A4 Copyright: 2011 Columbia Daily Tribune Contact: http://www.columbiatribune.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/91 Note: Prints the street address of LTE writers. Author: Henry J. Waters III Bookmark: http://mapinc.org/topic/Mexico Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization) MEXICO AND THE DRUG WAR Incomprehensible Reactions Daily reports of drug war violence seem to slip past our consciousness. What are we thinking? Gang warfare wracks Mexico from border to border. Outlaws murder judges and police officers when they aren't busy killing each other. The crime is beyond control in Mexico. Drugs make too much money. In America it's the same, except it's compounded because we have a huge crime problem related to drug use as well as drug-trafficking. Even in a quiet town like Columbia, local drug war violence has made enough news to fill a book. Our police do as well as one can expect, but the drug trade simply is too lucrative to deny. The crime will continue, and we will keep paying billions to fight a losing war on drugs. Judging from our public attitude, we don't care. We are willing to tolerate a situation that produces most of our community's criminal activity. I suppose most of us believe those shootings and break-ins and robberies will not affect us. Over on the other side of town, let the bad guys and the cops duke it out. We don't seem to care that our billion-dollar war is not working. In a perverse way, the more law enforcement we deploy, the higher drug prices become, the more lucrative the black market, the larger the incentive for more criminal activity and the more we will spend on enforcement. It's a vicious losing cycle only getting worse. We could stop the violence here and in Mexico and everywhere else where illegal drugs are produced and sold into the huge U.S. black market. We could legalize drugs just as we did almost a hundred years ago with alcohol, when a similar black-market crime spree threatened our peace and tranquility. Why won't we learn the lesson? We argue to ourselves that the potential effects of illegal drugs are worse than the potential effects of alcohol. We arrest for driving under the influence instead of driving while intoxicated even though violations always involve alcohol. If the crime implied bad driving because of drug use, apparently arrests would cease. We spend a lot combating the effects of alcohol abuse but nothing fighting alcohol black market crime. We continue to push the rope, spending billions fighting a losing drug war, creating the largest, most violent black market in the world and underwriting criminal activity in our own communities. The one thing the war is not doing is controlling drug use. What are we thinking? Whatever our thoughts are, they're buried. We will let the war rage on around the corner, out of sight. Maybe if we look away, the shooters will miss us. Yet most of the crime in America is drug-related. How come we don't stop it? We think legalizing drugs with laws like those for alcohol would lead every teenager to use more. But think of the illegal drug sales system we have now, with sellers getting rich pushing drugs on ninth-graders. Would it not be better for safe, regulated drugs to be available in the drugstore? Like Bud Light. HJW III Our national drug is alcohol. We tend to regard the use of any other drug with special horror. - - WILLIAM S. BURROUGHS - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom