Source: Orange County Register (CA) Contact: http://www.ocregister.com/ Copyright: 1998 The Orange County Register Pubdate: Sunday, 13 Dec 1998 Author: Alan Bock - Mr. Bock is the Register's senior editorial writer Note: This article appeared on the commentary page of the Sunday Register. Title: DRUG CRAZY: HOW WE GOT INTO THIS MESS AND HOW WE CAN GET OUT Author: Mike Gray Info: 251 pages. Random House. $23.95 "Drug Crazy" is not the best critique of the absurd drug wars the American government has waged with varying levels of intensity since around 1914 - American University law professor Arnold Trebach's book from the early and mid-1980s, along with Auburn University economist Bruce Thornton's more recent book on the economics of prohibition are more systematic and intellectually disciplined - but it's the best one produced this year. And since Mike Gray is a screenwriter by trade (he did "The China Syndrome," among others) it has a narrative urgency and accessibility that more academic efforts sometimes lack. Mike Gray knows how to tell a story with tragic episodes and implications and he tells it well. It's focused on the last couple of decades, bringing drama and a tragic sensibility to the story. The story is familiar enough. Initially goodhearted people believe they're protecting society from substances that do have real perils, choose to do it with the blunt instrument of prohibition (again, that simplifying urge) and eventually become entrenched interests with turf to protect more than social crusaders. In the process they facilitate massive (and massively brutal) criminal enterprises, ruin countless human lives, shred the Constitution (the Fourth Amendment is less than a remnant these days), turn law-enforcement officials who start out believing they are doing good into cold-hearted, sometimes brutal and often corrupt enforcers, fill prisons with non-violent "offenders" themselves and make the problem worse. The success of medical marijuana initiatives in various states this November suggest that voters are starting to move beyond the craziness, but officials lag far behind. A return to sanity and freedom can't happen quickly enough, but will probably take a good deal more persuasion and organizing. Mike Gray's book should help the process along just a bit. - --- Checked-by: Richard Lake