Pubdate: Thu, 17 Nov 2016 Source: Windsor Star (CN ON) Copyright: 2016 The Windsor Star Contact: http://www.canada.com/windsorstar/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/501 Author: Dalson Chen Page: A7 WINDSOR LAW PROF PROPOSES LEGALIZING ALL DRUGS Substance-free world a fantasy; best to permit, but discourage, he advises It's time to admit we've lost the war on drugs - and to take the radical course of legalizing all of them, University of Windsor law professor emeritus Bill Bogart says in his new book. "Look, there is no perfect answer here. We will always have people using substances," said Bogart, whose book Off the Street: Legalizing Drugs was released Nov. 12 on Dundurn Press. "The notion of a drug-free world is a fantasy. And so we have to figure out the least harmful way to address substance consumption." A 280-page analysis, Off the Street proposes what is admittedly a "controversial pathway" regarding recreational drugs - a shift from criminalization to regulation. The first step is conceding that the so-called War on Drugs declared by the U.S. government more than 40 years ago has been an abject failure. "It has not achieved its central objective, which was to suppress drug use," Bogart argued. Indeed, Bogart said statistics show use of some drugs has actually increased. And beyond that, the war has had deep collateral costs. "We've imprisoned people simply because they take a substance. We've allowed a black market, that is run by thugs, to flourish. We've deprived governments of a revenue source from an industry - and it is an industry," Bogart said. According to Bogart, the approach we must now take towards drugs - the "least bad" way forward - is to "permit but discourage." It's a concept that Bogart feels is not far-fetched. "Permit but discourage. This is the same rubric we've applied to other areas of consumption: alcohol, tobacco, gambling, even non-nutritious food," Bogart said. "At one point, alcohol and gambling were criminalized - forbidden - until we came to realize the costs of prohibition were simply too high." While Bogart agrees that revamping legislation and building a regulatory framework for all recreational drugs will be a complicated task, he believes it is realistic and achievable. "We'll start with marijuana, and we'll learn from that experience," Bogart said. "From there, we will cautiously and incrementally look at legalizing and regulating substances such as cocaine and heroin." Steps regarding the latter substance are not as remote as one might think. Bogart pointed out that supervised injection sites in Vancouver are already providing "safe harbours" for heroin users, in the hopes of preventing the spread of disease, reducing overdoses and intercepting tainted drugs. As for those who fear for the health and safety of children in a world where all drugs are legal, Bogart said he shares such concerns. "We must always, in my view, have the protection of children as our first priority." "(Critics) will search long and hard for anything in my book that suggests we should take a lackadaisical attitude towards children and drugs. The question that I ask back is: How, in fact, do we prevent kids from using drugs?" Bogart said. "I would suggest the criminal paradigm has not been effective. 'Just say no' is simply sloganeering." Off the Street: Legalizing Drugs is available in paperback and ebook formats via Dundurn Press, www.dundurn.com - --- MAP posted-by: Matt