Pubdate: Fri, 29 Jun 2012 Source: News-Press (Fort Myers, FL) Copyright: 2012 The News-Press Contact: http://www.news-press.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1133 Author: John Agnew IT'S TIME FOR SOME LOGICAL THINKING ABOUT DRUGS In medicine, we learn, "When what you are doing is not working, do something different." The government, especially the federal government, believes, "When what we are doing is not working, keep doing the same thing (with more money) while expecting different results." By happy coincidence, that is the definition of insanity. Years ago, Time magazine had a cover story about legalizing drugs, since nothing else worked or would work, and here we are today, mired in the same mess only worse. The "War on Drugs," proposed by a Puritanical government run by libertines, has spent upwards of a trillion dollars and accomplished nothing except provide a lot of good jobs, with benefits and pensions, plus headless bodies near the Mexican border, along with corrupted or murdered judges, politicians, police and journalists. All of this is directly due to the profit motive. By another happy coincidence, the same thing happened with Prohibition. As that Vietnam-era song asked, "When Will They Ever Learn?" With alcohol as with other drugs, you can't eliminate the market for them by legislation. How convenient it would be if we could. As of this writing, we have had 22 murders in Fort Myers in six months. If there is a common denominator, and police Chief Doug Baker thinks there is, it is the drug business. Turf wars, deals gone bad, men with short fuses and semi-automatic weapons; all are mixed together to form a deadly brew. The News-Press called for suggestions, and received many: Better education; rallies and parades; lock the politicians in a room until they solve the problem; provide more and better jobs for young, black men, and more. But if drugs are the common denominator, that's where the focus will have to be. No amount of good intentions will eliminate the profit motive. For men with insufficient education faced with a terrible job market, selling drugs is an attractive alternative (except in Miami, where they have turned to Medicare fraud---the profit is the same and they don't get shot). Chief Baker's goal is to "choke it out completely," which he intends to do, probably by the same methods that haven't worked in forty-some years. I don't doubt his good intentions, but otherwise see paragraph one. I'm like a Libertarian, in that I can recommend any kind of plan because it won't be implemented, thus I can't be held accountable for the results. So here's my plan: Put cocaine in 55-gallon drums on every street corner. It's free. There will be no profit and no reason to shoot people. "But people will die!" you might say. "People are dying now," I would respond. "Where have you been?" That's not just from gunshots, either, but also from overdoses of all sorts of drugs, and every day. What we want is for everyone to stop using drugs and lead an upright, productive life. That's fine, but it's not going to happen, any more than with alcohol. Removing the profit motive won't help, there, but it will remove the reason for the violence. That's simply the best we can hope to do, and we will have to accept it. Before you dismiss this as silly, remember that the "War on Drugs" has been an expensive and unmitigated failure, with no reason to think this will change (paragraph one, again) so it's past time to do that something different. Our drug problem is not one of morality, as our Puritanical government insists, but of practicality, and we should approach it that way. We can remove the profit motive. And we should. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom