Pubdate: Mon, 30 Aug 1999 Source: Standard-Times (MA) Copyright: 1999 The Standard-Times Contact: 25 Elm Street, New Bedford, MA 02740 Website: http://www.s-t.com/ Forum: http://www.s-t.com/cgi-bin/Ultimate.cgi?actionintro Author: Froma Harrop Note: The writer is a Providence Journal editorial writer and columnist DISPENSE WITH OUR DRUG RATIONALIZATIONS PROVIDENCE, R.I. George W. Bush vows that he has not used illegal drugs for the last 25 years, by which we may infer that 26 years ago, he did. Republican Party leaders are standing by their man. No cynic should find this surprising, though I had clung to a naive expectation that the party of moral rectitude might prefer a candidate who had probably not committed a youthful felony. And so George W. Bush's quest for the White House rolls forward. Before leaving the subject of drug use, though, I would like to raise strong objections to at least two of the defensive rationales being put forth by Bush supporters. One is that "experimenting" (don't you love that word?) with hard drugs was "a rite of passage for baby boomers" in the '70s. They all did it. The other is that using illegal drugs is really a victimless crime. Let me state right here: I am a Baby Boomer, and I have never ever used cocaine or any other hard drug. And I did not spend the '70s in a convent. I spent them in Greenwich Village. (I did try pot twice. Mom, Dad, I'm sorry.) My friends and I did not break the law regarding hard drugs for two reasons. One: We believed the health warnings that taking drugs would fry our brains. Two: Getting caught would have dire consequences. Over the last decade or so, drug use has become more casual and democratized, but it was considered a very serious crime 25 years ago. In 1973, New York State passed a draconian law imposing mandatory jail time for drug possession and automatic life sentences for dealing. The office worker convicted for possessing the tiniest amount of cocaine would have lost his or her job by nightfall. A lawyer would be booted out of the Bar. Yes, a good number of middle-class people used drugs in the '70s, but it was not everybody or even close to everybody. Most who did seemed to be artists or rich kids who thumbed their noses at rules governing the working stiffs. Let us now examine rationalization number two, that drug use falls into the category of "victimless crime." This is also not so. As long as drug use remains illegal, those who live near the drug marketplaces will suffer from resulting crime and violence. Later in the '70s, I moved to Manhattan Valley, a mostly poor, black and Latino outpost on Manhattan's Upper West Side. Because Manhattan Valley's population did include a group of middle-class gentrifiers like myself, it became a major emporium for well-to-do people seeking drugs. Put bluntly, a white kid in his Chevy Camaro with New Jersey plates and holding a wad of drug money would not want to stop in an angry black ghetto to pick up his recreational narcotics. So he came to Manhattan Valley, where there was a protective middle-class presence but not enough social stability to keep out the drug trade. Manhattan Valley became the place where drug dealers could connect with real money. As a result, life for the residents turned to hell. There were shootings nightly. Usually, the drug merchants hit their intended and unlamented targets, but stray bullets would hit innocents with some regularity. The victims were often children who had not yet figured out which streets were safe and which were not. Law-abiding residents began to regard the crawling line of polished cars waiting for their drug pickups with disgust. Poor people were most likely to get caught in the crossfire of warring drug dealers (at least we had doormen). The poor were the first to get nabbed for drug use by law enforcement officers, who rarely invaded upscale cocktail parties in which lines of coke were passed around on silver trays. This is why I admire New Mexico Gov. Gary Johnson's suggestion that the federal government decriminalize or even legalize drugs. Governor Johnson, a Republican who admits to cocaine use in college, seems to understand the hypocrisy underlying our drug laws. That insight is lacking in Governor Bush, who has backed a Texas law that sends people possessing a single gram of what he probably used to possess to jail. I still believe that drugs fry the brain, and will never use them. But if hard drugs were legalized, the nasty illegal market for narcotics would dry up. Taking drugs would become just another self-destructive but legal activity, like smoking or getting drunk. And, importantly, everybody would finally be playing by the same set of rules. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D