Pubdate: Monday, November 1, 1999 Source: Toronto Star (CN ON) Copyright: 1999, The Toronto Star Contact: http://www.thestar.com/ Author: Mark Latowsky, Toronto Related: OPED at: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v99/n1140/a01.html POLITICAL AGENDA POLARIZES DRUG POLICY DISCUSSION Re Canada shouldn't follow U.S. model (Opinion page, Oct. 19) by Ethan A. Nadelmann, in which he claims drug reform is both timely and necessary, not only in the U.S. but also in Canada. Nadelmann is not a preacher but a pragmatist. A trip to the library would confirm the truth that drug problems always have been, and always will be, with us. Nadelmann is not a moral reformer but a common sense reformer. Zero tolerance and the war on drugs is primarily a U.S. moral metaphor, driven as he so poignantly describes, "by vested pecuniary and institutional interests." But while the metaphor may still burn bright in the eyes of Barry McCaffrey, head of the White House drug policy office, it is not the blind that we have to fear but the ones who will not see. Nadelmann is not an advocate of legislation, he is an advocate of responsibility. We all, as democratic citizens, have the responsibility to take it upon ourselves to examine our own drug policies and ask what the true benefits and harms to drug users and to society are. We have a responsibility to dispassionately evaluate our response to the drug problem - despite strong rhetoric that "just saying no" will do. We have a responsibility to seriously consider the effects of our drug policy on the fundamental rights of those human beings affected. Drug policy discussion is easily polarized by those with political motives. It is much more difficult to painstakingly sort through the gray to find the black and white. My hat goes off to those, like Nadelmann, who try. Mark Latowsky Department of Family and Community Medicine University of Toronto Toronto - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake