Source: Standard-Times (MA) Contact: http://www.s-t.com/ Pubdate: Wednesday, 08 July, 1998 Author: Deborah G. Roher, New Bedford, MA Note: This is the third positive response to a Standard Times OP-ED, which can be found at http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v98.n489.a01.html DRUG PROHIBITION IS UNDER HEAVY ATTACK I commend your decision not to revive the Drug Watch column and your editorial explaining that decision, but I would go a stop further. "A tactic that didn't work then and didn't work now" is also an apt description of the national policy of "war on drugs," also known as prohibition. The orthodoxy of this ideology is so corrosive that in its name we have allowed our dearest civil liberties to be stripped away, yet it is so entrenched that until recently to question it was to be labeled as a member of the lunatic fringe. Last month, 500 prominent and accomplished men and women from all walks of life and many nations signed an advertisement calling on U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan to stop pouring money into the failed policies of prohibition. Their letter declared, "We believe the global war on drugs is now causing more harm than drug abuse itself." It cited the corruption and violence, adverse effects on public health and the environment, lost tax revenues, and wasted lives associated with the policy of prohibition. The signers of this letter included not only academics and civil libertarians, but present and former government officials from the U.S. and abroad, three sitting federal judges, and current and former high-ranking police officers. Unfortunately, readers who depend on this newspaper remained ignorant of the publication of this extraordinary letter. Hitherto unthinkable thoughts about the pros and cons of legalizing drugs, about what it would mean to treat drug abuse as a public health problem rather than a criminal and military problem, have finally begun to percolate into our national discourse. The Standard-Times would perform a great service to its community by letting the readership in on the conversation. DEBORAH G. ROHER New Bedford - --- Checked-by: Mike Gogulski