Pubdate: Fri, 11 Mar 2011 Source: DrugSense Blog Website: http://drugsense.org/blog/ LETTER OF THE WEEK DRUGS WON THE WAR Re: Canada's illicit drug trade growing, March 3. So if I read this article correctly, all the billions of dollars spent on the "war on drugs" in the United States and Canada has resulted in a growth in the trade. The International Narcotics Control Board (INCB) spokesperson then goes on to say what a "professional" job the RCMP and the Canadian government have done in combating drug trafficking. This raises a couple of questions: are illicit drugs harder to find than they were 30 years ago when the "war on drugs" started? No. Has scarcity even made the price go up? Again no. So, in other words, prohibition has completely failed and, in fact, has caused a great deal of harm by criminalizing a large segment of the population for use of a relatively harmless herb (marijuana). Compare this to the approach toward cigarettes, a legal product guaranteed to kill 50 per cent of its consumers. Tobacco is taxed quite heavily. Those taxes pay for education and smoking cessation programs. And smoking rates have declined substantially over the same 30-year period. So, you would think that, if your real goal was to reduce illicit drug use, the "professional" approach would be to admit that prohibition has failed and try legalization, regulation, taxation, and education. Of course, that might threaten those "drug and related budgets" which the INCB insist must be maintained. If they actually solved the problem, a whole lot of "enforcers" would need new jobs. Scott Kelland Merrickville Pubdate: Sat, 5 Mar 2011 Source: Ottawa Citizen (CN ON) Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v11/n147/a07.html - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake