Source: Denver Post (CO) Contact: http://www.denverpost.com/ Pubdate: Sun, 12 July 1998 Author: Ed Quillen CAN ANYBODY TELL US WHAT VICTORY MEANS IN THIS LONGEST WAR? July 12 - One should be suspicious, I suppose, whenever there is agreement between Newton Leroy Gingrich, Republican speaker of the House of Representatives, and William Jefferson Clinton, Democratic president of the United States of America. They joined for a trip to Atlanta last week to announce yet another phase of the War on Drugs, this time a propaganda campaign. Meanwhile, various military campaigns are in full operation, including chemical warfare - herbicide bombs for farms in South America - and more traditional means, such as the deployment of infantry along the southern border to kill sheep herders. The new propaganda barrage will involve hard-hitting paid advertisements, aimed at discouraging drug use among youth, and will cost millions, perhaps billions. Now I'm not going to be the one to question the efficacy of advertising, since I sell the stuff in one of my enterprises and certainly benefit from it in other pursuits. But when it comes to drug usage, advertising, along with the media in general, presents a mixed message. On one hand, teenagers and the rest of us see myriad messages telling us to take drugs to feel better: Tylenol for that headache, Advil for that sore back, Prozac for that frazzled feeling, Viagra for those male occasions when the spirit is willing but the flesh is weak. On the other, there will be the latest propaganda campaign from the Drug Czar, telling us that it's not right to take something to feel better. How to tell the proper from improper substances? Kids are supposed to trust the government to know the difference, I guess - and if they believe everything the government tells them, then our public schools are every bit as bad as the critics say. But for the sake of argument, let us suppose that this propaganda barrage succeeds and that we have a "DrugFree America'' where cannabis, crank, coca compounds, poppy extracts and the like are totally unknown. What would happen then? Would all the government make-work programs be terminated? Would the snoops, spies and thugs have to find honest work? Would prisons close for lack of business? Would the Bill of Rights mean something again? Or would the warriors merely turn their attention to new substances, now socially acceptable, like caffeine and theobromine (a chemical found in chocolate that may be psychoactive)? If this sounds unlikely, consider that many currently controlled substances were once staples of legitimate commerce: The Founding Fathers grew hemp; heroin was developed and marketed by the same Bayer company that produced aspirin; cocaine was sold over the counter at dispensaries operated by mining companies in Colorado a century ago; amphetamines were dispensed by our own military to keep soldiers alert. We citizens who get requisitioned to support this War on Drugs ought to ask "What constitutes victory?'' before even more billions are spent. In other words, what would have to happen to end this war and begin the demobilization and consequent return to a limited civilian government, rather than the big and intrusive urine-sampling one that operates now? Or is the definition of "victory'' purposely so vague that the Drug Warriors, after defeating some substances, would be able to turn their guns toward others, thereby ensuring that they have a permanent slot at the public trough? For some reason, I feel confident that these questions will not be answered by the latest propaganda campaign. But our political process may be starting to address these and related issues. Jack Woehr of Golden, a correspondent who has expressed seditious sentiments much like mine, tried running for office two years ago and wrote that the state Democratic Party didn't want anything to do with him on account of his failure to express the politically correct enthusiasm for the War on Drugs. But this year, he reported, he easily gained the Democratic nomination for state Representative from District 62, which stretches from Golden west across the Great Divide. He suspects that the party leadership has concluded that it is difficult to support policies that lead to an 18 percent increase in prison spending and only 3 percent more for education, and so he was finally welcomed to the fold. Jack also mentioned that his campaign may be watched closely by every candidate in Colorado to see whether it's safe to quit lying to voters about the wonders of the War on Drugs. But truth in a campaign is a tough road, especially when master politicians like Clinton and Gingrich can tap the public treasury to promulgate more deception. Ed Quillen of Salida is a former newspaper editor whose column appears Tuesdays and Sundays. His book, "Deep in the Heart of the Rockies,'' is a collection of past Post columns. - --- Checked-by: Mike Gogulski