Pubdate: December 1999 Source: Kehillat Isreal (CA) Address: 16019 Sunset Boulevard, Pacific Palisades CA 90272 Fax: (310) 573-2098 Author: Rabbi Steven Carr Reuben Note: At the service Tuesday for Jim Rosenfield Rabbi Ruben introduced the newsletter in which this article is printed with the comment that he had received daily email messages from Jim demanding an answer to what the Jewish community was going to do about these injustices. He also smiled as he said how happy he was that Jim knew that he had started this series. THE "WAR ON DRUGS" AND THE DEATH OF COMPASSION First In A Series In 1980 the Federal government spent $4 billion on the drug war. This year we are spending over four times that much, and the saddest part is that most of that money goes not to help people stop using drugs or get help for their addictions, but simply to throw them in prison. Drug arrests have now pushed the U.S. jail and prison population to over 1.8 million people, almost the highest in the world, of whom an estimated 1.2 million are alcohol or drug abusers. In addition, 2.3 million are on probation and parole. Few of these people are violent, high-level dealers. In fact, more than 90% of all drug arrests are of nonviolent offenders guilty only of possession or of dealing small quantities to support their own habits. Our lack of an intelligent social policy and the fear that plagues elected leaders of being branded as "soft on drugs" has led to a crisis in America that should embarrass and shame us all with its cruelty and lack of both compassion and plain common sense. Consider this - the annual cost to incarcerate one addict in prison is about $25,900. The annual cost to provide long-term residential treatment for one addict is about $6,800. The cost to decrease cocaine consumption 1% by eradicating the sources of supply is about $783 million. The cost to decrease cocaine consumption 1% by increasing drug treatment is about $34 million. Even someone as bad in math as I can instantly see how foolishly we are wasting our precious financial resources that could be eradicating illiteracy and providing parenting classes to reduce child abuse and family violence instead of this misguided war. It is time to reassess the monumental waste of public funds that is destroying millions of families needlessly, incarcerating and taking fathers and mothers who pose no real threat to society away from their children every day. Instead we need to look seriously at how other countries have dealt in a compassionate way with addictions of all kinds, including drugs, and stop punishing the very people who are most in need of our help. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake