Pubdate: Saturday, March 7th, 1998 Source: Houston Chronicle Contact: http://www.chron.com/ Editors note: The author of this letter is a member of the Drug Policy Forum of Texas: http://www.mapinc.org/DPFT/ CHILDREN AREN'T THE PROBLEM With his tough, drug-war rhetoric, Tony Cantu sounds as if he must be planning to run for political office ("Going soft on narco-traffickers will hurt our children," Outlook, Mar. 1). Certification of other countries as allies in the war on drugs is a bad idea. Third World countries are unable to cope with the power and corrupting influence of drug money. Decertification is counterproductive. It is supposed to lead these countries to just say "no" to the influence of bribes and threats against their leaders and to do more to stop the multibillion-dollar trade in illegal drugs -- something they have been unable to accomplish ever before. Decertification actually harms the relations with other countries and decreases opportunities for legitimate business, pushing new people to work in the drug trade. Blaming other countries for illegal drug use in the United States is an attempt to escape from reality. No other country would send any drugs to the United States if the market in this country didn't send tons of dollars to corrupt their citizens. No one wants their children to use legal or illegal drugs. But to claim that $30 billion worth of cocaine is poisoning U.S. children each year is an attempt to produce an emotional gut reaction rather than an intelligent decision. Few children buy cocaine. Children are not a factor in what drives the illegal drug business. Millions of adult users and the billions of dollars spent on plentiful, but prohibited substances, are. Gregg Davis, Houston