Source: The Oregonian Copyright: 1998 The Oregonian Pubdate: 25 Nov 1998 Contact: FAX: 503-294-4193 Mail: 1320 S.W. Broadway, Portland, OR 97201 Website: http://www.oregonlive.com/ Author: Lynda Bayer Note: Linda Bayer, a Harvard-trained psychologist who has worked with youngsters suffering from substance abuse, is senior writer and stategic analyst at the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy. Also note: This is in response to columnist Molly Ivins column which appeared in a number of newspapers. Newshawks, if you spot either the column or this response in another newspaper, please send it The column, as it appeared in two newspapers, is at: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v98.n1059.a04.html and http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v98.n1060.a06.html U.S. DRUG POLICY IS SOUND, DESPITE WHAT MOLLY IVINS MIGHT THINK The language of Molly Ivins' column, " Politicians lag behind the people on drug issues," in the Oregonian on Nov. 18 rings nostalgically from the mid-1960's. She speaks of the "poor frozen political establishment" and a misbegotten " war we're losing." The times are changing, says Ivins, and the proverbial " emperor is wearing no clothes," Ivins calls for an end to the disparity in the sentencing between crack and powder cocaine. Although the claim that these two forms equal " the same drug" misses the enormous addictive potential of crack compared to powdered cocaine, the point is still well taken. In fact, Barry McCaffrey, director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy, and Attorney General Janet Reno have called on Congress to reduce this disparity. Likewise, the column criticizes " the establishment" for advocating more prisons and longer sentences. The fact is, McCaffrey helped double the number of drug courts that offer treatment rather than imprisonment for first-time non-violent offenders. Likewise, McCaffrey is calling for expansion of drug treatment in prisons so that every inmate who seeks help --- and even those who don't but need it --- can be cured from the addiction that fuels the cycle of drugs and crime. For more than two years, McCaffrey has been repeating that the effort to reduce drug abuse in America is not a "war." This man knows war, having nearly lost an arm in combat and having led the famed " left hook" that won the Persian Gulf War. Instead of fighting, McCaffrey speaks of prevention and treatment in medical terms akin to the search for a cancer cure. As much as we'd like to think otherwise, 30 years have passed and this is not Vietnam. We need to open our eyes and see what's going on. The medical marijuana referenda that have passed in several states, including Oregon, are something of a hoax because Marinol, --- the real "medical marijuana" --- has been available for 15 years. The active form of cannabis, THC, can be prescribed legally by physicians and taken in measured doses as well as guaranteed purity. It isn't prescribed often because new and better medications --- such as ondansetron and denisetron, which have fewer side effects --- have been invented, but that's beside the point. No one argues that patients should have the right to bypass pure forms of penicillin so they can grow it on moldy bread at home. We don't need to endanger our pure food and drug system, which has made American medicine among the safest in world, for a drug that is already available. Mike Gray's book might be "lively"...polemic," as Ivins put it, but it's short on science and facts. Prohibition worked in terms of reducing rates of alcohol consumption and alcoholism; it wasn't repealed because it was a flop but because the country wanted liquor to be legal. When substances are sanctioned and available, use goes up --- including abuse by children. The hard truth here is that legalizing a psychoactive substance would increase abuse among young people, and the age of initiation has dropped steadily, so we're talking about teens and preteens. The overwhelming majority of America don't want to pay that price, so they oppose legalizing pot. Two good books on this subject are Dr. Avrum Goldstein's "Addiction: From Biology to Drug Policy" and Jill Jonnes's Hepcats, Narcs, and Pipe Dreams: A History of America's Romance with Illegal Drugs." These authors are a medical doctor and professor of pharmacology at Stanford University and Johns Hopkins University, respectively --- not a Hollywood movie maker. The National Drug Control Strategy elaborates on the country's sound, balanced, long range plan. Read it, you'll like it. - --- Checked-by: Richard Lake