Pubdate: Thu, 28 Apr 2011 Source: Parthenon, The (WV Edu) Copyright: 2011 The Parthenon Contact: http://www.marshall.edu/parthenon/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2171 Author: Bishop Nash WAR ON DRUGS A LOST CAUSE Each day, I drive out of the dark hills and into the city of Huntington when I go to class. Each day, I pass trailer park meth labs and flop house apartments as I wriggle out of the trees and on to Marshall's campus. Drugs are ubiquitous; there's no escaping it. The War on Drugs isn't a war, it's one group of people sandbagging for a flood while another group is swimming in the water. They're never going to leave, and it'd be in our best interest as a society to learn to live with it rather than against it. The drug market is capitalism at its finest and very worst: A service provider selling a product to a consumer who has the cash and desire for the goods. Often times, producing and selling drugs is a last resort when making a modest income just isn't going to happen. This is the case in undeveloped areas such as South America, North Africa and the vast majority of Asia. These people have no other option of making any sort of substantial living other than growing poppies, cocaine or cannabis. There's no way any amount of regulation or enforcement is going to make them stop pushing the product if it puts shoes on their feet. Once the shipment has left whichever shady port it's being hauled into, it takes a stimulant retail associate -- known in some circles as a drug dealer -- to deliver the product to the costumer. This link in the chain is unbreakable as well because of our own consumerist pressures. In an age where the middle class will burn through eight credit cards for a BMW and hardwood flooring, extra cash on the side selling an illicit product is easy money to make. As Westerners, we're programmed to constantly buy; we'll take additional income from source provided it equips us with the means to buy that next nice thing. Needless to say, most drugs are physically and/or mentally addicting and will always have a steady consumer base as long as they are available. And they'll always be available. Always. I'm not a fan of it, but it's inevitable. We're going to lose the war on drugs. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake