Pubdate: Thu, 30 Jan 1997 Source: Dallas Morning News (TX) Author: Greg Goldmakher Prohibition fails Frank Rich's column ("Double Standards - Alcohol erodes foundation for war on drugs," Viewpoints, Jan. 14) is like a breath of fresh air in an atmosphere of choking hypocrisy. At long last, someone has recognized that Prohibition, both of alcohol and of other drugs, is a strategy doomed to fail. At the end of the column, Mr. Rich suggests that if we were to legalize and regulate marijuana, it would actually be harder for kids to get it than it is now. This is absolutely correct. When I was in high school, about a decade ago, I knew exactly where to go if I had wanted to get pot. I could not, however, get alcohol, since Massachusetts (where I lived at the time) had a very strict enforcement of the drinking age. Illegal drug dealers have no incentive to ask customers for ID, but legitimate store owners do, for fear of losing their business. It seems stupid for us to expend law enforcement resources on this drug. If the police and courts did not waste time and effort busting marijuana users and dealers, they would be able to devote their energy to much more serious crimes, such as robbery, rape and murder. In the Netherlands, where marijuana has been decriminalized and is easy to obtain, the rate of heavy marijuana use by teens is much lower than in the United States, the rate of hard drug use is also much lower, and the rate of violent crime is lower as well. GREG GOLDMAKHER, Dallas