Pubdate: Tue, 24 Nov 1998 Source: USA Today (US) Contact: http://www.usatoday.com/news/nfront.htm Copyright: 1998 USA TODAY, a division of Gannett Co. Inc. Author: Sam Vincent Meddis, USA TODAY USA Today technology site http://www.usatoday.com/life/cyber/cc.htm A VIRTUAL BREEZE COMES TO WASHINGTON One of the real nice things about working at USA TODAY is the view. From my cube on the 22nd floor of the company's tower in Arlington, Va., I'm afforded what can only be described as a spectacular panorama of Washington, D.C. What I like best is that on a clear day you can almost see the hot air rising from the various government buildings there. As you might expect, the bombast, deception and exaggeration of official Washington get particularly thick when some hot-button issues pop up on the political agenda, anything from taxes to gun control to Monicagate. But it seems to me that nothing has caused more sustained government hot air thanthe so-called drug war. Now thanks to the Internet, a cool breeze may be moving in. Let me explain. I personally braved many an anti-drug wind as a reporter for the paper covering criminal justice issues. It even seemed fitting that the last story I wrote before becoming online tech editor here was about our nation's misguided drug policies. The story, which ran on Nov. 20, 1995, was about the FBI's annual report of crime across the USA. What caught my eye were statistics showing that, contrary to drug warriors' get-tough pronouncements, police were arresting more low-level users and fewer dealers, while busting as many people for marijuana as for the hard-core drugs cocaine and heroin combined. Over the years I saw how billions of dollars were misspent on law enforcement efforts to battle drugs: thousands of arrests from inner-city dragnets with military-sounding names, sweeps that turned neighborhoods into war zones; huge increases in prison populations because of mandatory sentences that rivaled punishment for rape and homicide, incarcerations that often only made inmates more crime-prone and violent; extravagant and largely futile measures to prevent illegal drugs from entering our country, such as the ill-conceived dirigibles strung on our southern border that smugglers all-too easily sidestepped. All the while, insufficient attention was paid to the underlying reasons why our nation has such a gigantic drug appetite. Or as Barry Krisberg, president of the National Council of Crime and Delinquency http://www.nccd.com/, once described it to me, "why so many people in America want to blot out their existence with drugs." What we need is increased education and less scare tactics, more treatment and fewer busts. But the leaders of America's drug war are, in a sense, addicted to their get-tough policies. What has been lacking on the national scene to help cure them is a stronger reform voice. Until now. The Internet is starting to level the playing field between drug warrior and reformer. ''It's an incredible tool for the reform movement,'' says Kevin Zeese of the group Common Sense for Drug Policy http://csdp.org/factbook/. ''It's been a way to get people communicating, getting the information flow flowing and coordinating.'' The Lindesmith Center http://www.lindesmith.org/, for example, promotes what it calls "harm reduction," an alternative approach to the drug problem that tries to minimize the adverse effects of both drug use and prohibition. Another reform site, DrugSense http://www.drugsense.org/, serves as a kind of clearinghouse for breaking stories and editorial opinion. Paul Armentano of NORML http://norml.org/, which advocates the legalization of marijuana, says it's not a matter of drug-reform Web sites preaching to the converted. NORML's site gets several thousand visitors each day, and the feedback from many first-time visitors is quite positive, he says. "Eventually this is going to cause a very big groundswell for this issue." In addition to providing news reports and backgrounders on issues such as the medical use of marijuana, the site also takes advantage of the Web's interactive capabilities by allowing a visitor to send a free fax to members of Congress. David Border of the Drug Reform Coordination Network http://drcnet.org/ says that federal authorities have historically downplayed studies that contradict their get-tough approach. As then-President Richard Nixon did in 1972 by ordering limited printings of a report calling for decriminalization of personal amounts of marijuana, Border says. Another government technique is to release critical studies late on a Friday, when little media interest is likely, he says. Because of the organization's Drug Library http://www.druglibrary.org/, studies now are widely available to the public. The internet, says Border, "is changing things in a fundamental way." Can the Net blow away the anti-drug cloud that hangs over our nation's capitol? I'll be watching. By Sam Vincent Meddis, USA TODAY On the Web is a weekly column on issues and topics that will help you become a better informed, more adept Web traveler. - --- Checked-by: Don Beck