Pubdate: Tue, 03 Jan 2012
Source: High Country News (CO)
Copyright: 2012 High Country News
Contact: http://www.hcn.org/lettertoeditors.jsp
Website: http://www.hcn.org/index.jsp
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3977
Author: Rich Wandschneider
Note: Rich Wandschneider is a contributor to Writers on the Range, a service
of High Country News (hcn.org). He writes in Joseph, Oregon.

A NOVEL SOLUTION TO THE DRUG PROBLEM

A cop friend told me not long ago that he had changed his mind
completely on the idea of legalizing drugs. His current take:
"Legalize everything but meth and hang the meth-pushers" -- or
something close to that.

We were talking about a kid we both had known back in the day, a kid
who had had some problems, but skated along at the edge of the law,
made it through school and even had some jobs. Then he got hooked on
methamphetamine. He was in prison at the time.

Whether legal or illegal, drugs alter the way people think and the way
they behave, my friend said. Meth, however, does something worse: It
completely transforms its users into something else, loosening
whatever anchors of conscience and humanity they have.

"Regulate drugs as legal products, tax them, make them unattractive
for criminals, and let us go after the bad guys running the meth
business," he said. All these other illegal drugs -- from pot to
heroin -- create huge profit centers, and the law enforcement
community spends a great deal of time and energy chasing the criminals
who exploit them, leaving no time for pursuing meth dealers. Witness
two big marijuana-growing busts in Wallowa County last summer and the
local and state effort that went into the busts.

The illegal status of pot makes criminals out of ordinary people who
think drug laws are stupid and should be ignored, if not exploited.
Remember Prohibition, where backyard stills, wineries and breweries
made criminals of many rural people, and big-time criminals made
fortunes running alcohol across the borders of Canada and Mexico.

When I suggested that the big mountain to climb in legalizing drugs
(except for meth) would be the alcohol and tobacco lobbies, my friend
the policeman agreed.

And don't forget the "prison lobby," another friend, Ben Butzein,
added later. Ben was a drug user in the 1960s, and spent time in
prison for it. On his release, he hooked up with an outfit in
Portland, Ore., called "Better People," which helps ex-cons get their
lives back together. Ben was a fine example: He got his own life
together, became a fine cabinetmaker and sometime poet, and was a
part-time resident of Wallowa County in eastern Oregon.

He also fought for prison reform and for the rehabilitation of
prisoners, a stance that had him battling the prison lobby. I wish I
had Ben to talk to -- he passed away a few years ago -- or even one of
the letters he wrote to the Oregonian. But I remember him talking and
writing passionately about the prison builders and the corporate
owners and their lobbies -- private prisons were then a fast-growing
industry -- and how they influenced drug and prison reform.

Maybe the prison lobby has quieted down, but I doubt it. Alcohol and
tobacco industries and their lobbies must still have their thumbs in
any debate about legalizing currently illegal drugs. And I doubt that
the associations of prison guards and the attorneys and wardens who
make a living making sure that our country incarcerates more of its
citizens than any other "developed" country in the world, are staying
quiet. I imagine that the drug cartels in Mexico would also not favor
legalizing any of the drugs they sell so well in our country. Ditto
for the builders of border fences and surveillance systems; isn't it
amazing that fences on the Canadian border have been proposed?

Meanwhile, we continue to smoke and drink legally, and then we deal
with the health and crime problems these drugs generate. We continue
to make normal folks into criminals over drugs that could be regulated
and taxed and dealt with as we deal with alcohol. We continue to spend
law enforcement time and energy chasing after the bad guys attracted
to the business -- the heirs to the Prohibition era's Capones. And we
spend more and more money on a war on drugs that we cannot win.

We also continue to watch as weapons and drugs are shipped across our
southern border, as gangster wars erupt among the cartels and the dead
and dying operatives who keep border violence raging across Mexico. No
vacationing now in Acapulco!

And the meth guys? They are still out there, cooking their poisons in
small towns and large, running their stuff across state and national
boundaries, fueling crimes from theft to murder, filling prisons and
treatment programs, and giving the overburdened law enforcement
community more than full-time employment.

Rich Wandschneider is a contributor to Writers on the Range, a service
of High Country News (hcn.org). He writes in Joseph, Oregon.
- ---
MAP posted-by: Jo-D