Pubdate: Wed, 29 Dec 1999 Source: Daily Courier (PA) Copyright: 1999 Daily Courier Contact: http://www.dailycourier.com/ NOT GOOD ENOUGH Holding the line in the war against drugs, especially when our youths are involved, simply is not good enough. The recently released annual Monitoring the Future survey examining drug, alcohol and cigarette use among eighth-, 10th- and 12th graders indicates over-all teen-age drug use has remained stable for the third consecutive year. The use of most illegal drugs, including marijuana, cocaine, heroin and inhalants, remained steady in 1998. Cigarette smoking and alcohol use also remained stable, but the survey also indicated more high school students have been using steroids and the "club drug" ecstasy. While we applaud this turnaround in a decade that, for the most part, has seen an upward trend in drug use, we question whether the resources used in the war against drugs are being used as wisely as they could be. In a war that this country has poured hundreds of millions of dollars into since we began fighting it in earnest in the 1960s, having teen-age drug use remain stable for three years is nothing to boast about. How can it be that the richest and one of the most advanced nations in the world cannot do more than just hold the line in this most important of wars? America's generals fighting this war must rethink their strategy and find a way to effectively reverse the trend to one that consistently sees a decline in drug use among the nation's teen-agers and adults. Americans, all of us, must become involved in helping others turn away from drugs. We can do better. We must do better. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake