Source: Financial Post Contact: Pubdate: January 17, 1998 DRUG PROHIBITION HASN'T WORKED As a regular reader of Dr. Gifford-Jones' columns on health and an admirer of his common-sensical approach, his column, Canada And The U.S. Are Not Healthy Nations (Jan. 10-12) is the first one with which I find myself in (partial) disagreement. The disagreement stems from his views on the illegal drug problem. He feels we have "soft laws" on drugs and yet remarks, "everyone bears the cost of stolen cars and home break-ins to purchase illegal drugs." The issue is complex, but obviously prohibition hasn't worked. The fact drugs cannot be obtained legally by the wretched addicts is what causes the car thefts and break- ins, since they can only obtain supplies from criminals, at a high price. Last month The Financial Post ran a guest column by a Fraser Institute writer suggesting we need a public debate on this situation. A few years ago the head of Interpol expressed himself as being in favor of decriminalizing drug possession by users, but not in favor of legalization. He regarded drug use as a social and health issue rather than a police problem. In August, FP ran an article by Martin Wolf, a Financial Times correspondent, making a good case for legalization, which he remarked would remove an estimated US$400 billion annually from the criminal organizations who control the market. Wolf's concluding comment seems to me to make a lot of sense: "What is needed is for mature societies to recognize that some vices must be tolerated, because the alternative is still worse." Dec Dunne, Calgary.