Pubdate: Wed, 13 Oct 1999 Source: Boston Herald (MA) Copyright: 1999 The Boston Herald, Inc. Contact: One Herald Square, Boston, MA 02106-2096 Website: http://www.bostonherald.com/ Author: Don Feder N.M. GUV IS 1 BLOKE OVER THE LINE Speaking at George Washington University last week, New Mexico Gov. Gary Johnson invoked the biggest lie of the drug-legalization movement: The drug war is a multibillion dollar flop. Johnson is the first governor to call for unconditional surrender - the legalization of cocaine and heroin as well as marijuana. He smoked pot regularly as a student and found it delightful and salutary. ``I hate to say it, but the majority of people who use drugs use them responsibly,'' the Republican said. Clearly, Johnson hasn't spent much time in prisons, rehab centers, homeless shelters, emergency rooms or the seedier sections of our inner cities. The drug war a failure? All of our policy initiatives should be such a bust. According to ``The Index of Leading Cultural Indicators,'' between 1979 and 1997, there was a 60 percent decline in marijuana use nationally. From 1985 to 1997, cocaine use decreased 77 percent. Legalizers invariably retort that this progress is due exclusively to education. (Enforcement played no part, they insist.) Really, then why is teen smoking on the rise, despite incessant anti-tobacco appeals aimed at youth? It is no coincidence that crime rates are now at their lowest level since 1973. Between 1990 and 1997, the total crime rate in the United States fell 15.4 percent. Violent crimes are down 17 percent. Fight drugs and you fight crime. In 1997, 57 percent of state prisoners reported using drugs in the month before their offense. A study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association showed non-users who live with those who use drugs are 11 times more likely to die violently than those in drug-free homes. In Detroit, 75 percent of all child abuse cases are linked to drugs. Cocaine is responsible for 20 percent of highway fatalities in New York state. In 1995, there were 931,000 drug-related emergency room admissions. Legalize drugs and all of the above will be multiplied by some unknown factor. Responsible drug use is as much of an oxymoron as responsible road rage. You don't have to be the nation's drug czar to know that drugs loosen inhibitions and inhibit thinking. They make some people lazy and others crazy. Crack stimulates violence and paranoia. Heroin addicts have a hard time holding down jobs. Pot heads tend to be listless. I don't know anyone who believes that legalization will result in a decline in consumption. If some people are willing to risk substantial penalties to puff, snort or shoot up, imagine how many more will enter the drug scene when cheaper narcotics can be indulged risk-free. Health care costs, crime rates, domestic violence, joblessness - all would soar. The war on drugs is costly, and worth every cent. Ask the father of a child who's died from an overdose. Ask the mother who's seen her once-promising student (in the words of Dr. Timothy Leary) turn on, tune in and drop out. Ask the man who has struggled with his addiction for decades. Ask the coke baby in hell for his mother's habit. Ask the 3-year-old who's left alone in a filthy apartment by her addict mother or beaten to death by mom's doper boyfriend. Or, you could pose that question to Robert Downey Jr. at the Los Angeles County Jail. In August, the star of ``Chaplin'' and ``Restoration'' was sentenced to three years. Wealth and fame notwithstanding, Downey couldn't make it as a responsible drug user. In June 1996, the star was stopped for speeding. Inside his truck, police found crack cocaine, heroin and a pistol. Firearms frequently facilitate responsible drug use. After that arrest, the actor broke into a neighbor's home and fell asleep on a child's bed. Afterwards, there were repeated violations of probation. At his sentencing, Downey told Judge Lawrence Mira, ``It's like I have a shotgun in my mouth, and I got my finger on the trigger, and I like the taste of the gun metal.'' If Gov. Johnson and other legalizers have their way, many more Americans will develop that singular taste, and the rest of us will get to clean up the brain matter. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake