Pubdate: Fri 08/27 1999 Source: St. Petersburg Times (FL) Copyright: 1999 St. Petersburg Times Contact: http://www.sptimes.com/ Forum: http://www.sptimes.com/Interact.html Author: Jeffrey Harper PLAYING GAMES WITH THE LAW The ease with which are willing to excuse the past drug use of politicians is puzzling. It is as though the drug laws are a game to be beaten by the clever and well connected. If you get by for a few years and then 'fess up, all is well, and you are free to be elected to the Senate, presidency or what have you. If you get caught, well, too bad for you, especially if you are some run-of-the-mill schmo. It's off to prison for you. While you're serving your term, the politicians who broke the same drug laws that put you behind bars will proclaim the need to toughen our drug laws and lock the bums up. There is something wrong here. If it is okay to admit you broke the felony drug laws after you profess to going straight, how long an interval is required between the breaking of the law and the going straight to avoid jail? How much more of an interval is needed to be qualified for high office? Is it a matter of years? Months? Days? If we are serious about these drug laws, we should not be so quick to excuse the breaking of them just because so many have done so and gone unpunished. If we are not serious and do not apply the law to all equally, we need to rethink our strategy for fighting drug use. JEFFREY HARPER St. Petersburg - --- MAP posted-by: manemez j lovitto