Pubdate: Wed, 1 Dec 1999 Source: Orlando Sentinel (FL) Copyright: 1999 Orlando Sentinel Contact: 633 N.Orange Ave., Orlando, FL 32801 Website: http://www.orlandosentinel.com/ Forum: http://www.orlandosentinel.com/interact/messageboards/ Author: James R. McDonough, Special to the Sentinel Related: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v99/n1155/a01.html REESE WRONG ABOUT LEGALIZING DRUGS Charley Reese has trotted out the tired myth of rampant criminality during Prohibition to make a sophomoric case for legalizing drugs. Perhaps if he spent as much time as I have working with the addicted and their families, his rhetoric would be more temperate. His contention that anti-drug efforts, not drugs themselves, cause society greater harm is terribly wrong. Reese presents the legalizers' refrain that banning alcohol brought us Al Capone, tommy-guns, the St. Valentine's Day massacre and Chicago gangsters. He implies that if prohibiting alcohol caused crime, legalizing drugs would benefit society. The reality is that the murder rate went up more than 400 percent in the two decades before Prohibition (and before the Harrison Act of 1914, which constrained wholesale use of dangerous drugs). The 25 percent rise after Prohibition, by comparison, was minor, and the rate started back down before Prohibition was repealed. Even today we can attribute as much as 80 percent of crime to drug abuse -- not by those quietly using drugs at home but by those who commit crimes while high on drugs, some to obtain money for drugs. Reese also misses the point that drug abuse in America has dropped 50 percent (from 25 million users to 12.8 million) in the past two decades, while cocaine addiction has dropped by 70 percent. Recent Federal Bureau of Investigation statistics reveal an impressive drop in serious crimes, which experts credit, in part, to decreased crack-cocaine use. When we stop paying attention to the problem, it worsens. Youth use rose dramatically in the early 1990s after we abandoned the '80s' "Just Say No" campaign. Use fell after the onset of the National Youth Anti-Drug Media Campaign. So, although Reese argues that anti-drug efforts have failed, the Partnership for a Drug-Free America reports youth attitudes toward drugs becoming increasingly negative, a step in the right direction. Reese's basic point is that drug use is the user's problem. Actually, drug abuse is society's problem. Ask the children of addicts, who constitute more than 60 percent of foster-home placements. Ask the taxpayers who pay $110 billion a year in medical and social costs for the ravages of drug abuse. Most of all, ask the heart-broken parents who watch their children waste away as they turn into someone else -- drugs are, indeed, mind-altering -- because we did not care to keep those children drug-free. With this part of Reese's argument I agree: The struggle against drug abuse is not a war, because war implies a final victory, an ultimate vanquishing of a foe. This struggle will never end, for the minute we drop our guard, drug abuse will only roar back to do more harm. Nor is it a war, because we do not make war on children. Instead, we protect them from harm. The only wise solution is to continue the successful strategy of countering drug abuse, by endeavoring both to lower demand and to make it riskier to supply drugs to our citizenry. James R. McDonough is the director of the Office of Drug Control for Florida Gov. Jeb Bush and was the Director of Strategy in Barry McCaffrey's ONDCP in Washington D.C. - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck