News (Media Awareness Project) - US HI: Editorial: We're Losing Stomach For War Against Drugs |
Title: | US HI: Editorial: We're Losing Stomach For War Against Drugs |
Published On: | 2001-03-25 |
Source: | Honolulu Advertiser (HI) |
Fetched On: | 2008-09-01 15:36:26 |
WE'RE LOSING STOMACH FOR WAR AGAINST DRUGS
A survey by the respected Pew Research Center indicates that the American
public is increasingly convinced that we're losing the war against drugs,
and that there's little that can be done about it.
Yet the same survey suggests Americans, although in slowly shrinking
numbers, still think interdiction and imprisonment is the right way to deal
with this monumental domestic problem.
That means the nation isn't ready for abandonment of the prohibition of
drugs in favor of a radical new approach like the "Harm Reduction" model.
But it may mean people are changing their minds about whether drug use
should be treated as a disease, rather than a crime. They may also be ready
for a change in emphasis between punishment and treatment of drug users.
That's good news. Nationwide, as well as in Hawai'i, criminalization of
nonviolent drug use has been beneficial to no one but the prison-building
industry. Hawai'i continues to drag its feet in mandating treatment for
incarcerated drug users -- but that may be changing. More money for
treatment appears to be in the pipeline, and many lawmakers favor a new
facility to relieve prison overcrowding that would be devoted to treatment,
rather than punishment.
Attitudes about how to handle our drug problem are changing -- none too soon.
A survey by the respected Pew Research Center indicates that the American
public is increasingly convinced that we're losing the war against drugs,
and that there's little that can be done about it.
Yet the same survey suggests Americans, although in slowly shrinking
numbers, still think interdiction and imprisonment is the right way to deal
with this monumental domestic problem.
That means the nation isn't ready for abandonment of the prohibition of
drugs in favor of a radical new approach like the "Harm Reduction" model.
But it may mean people are changing their minds about whether drug use
should be treated as a disease, rather than a crime. They may also be ready
for a change in emphasis between punishment and treatment of drug users.
That's good news. Nationwide, as well as in Hawai'i, criminalization of
nonviolent drug use has been beneficial to no one but the prison-building
industry. Hawai'i continues to drag its feet in mandating treatment for
incarcerated drug users -- but that may be changing. More money for
treatment appears to be in the pipeline, and many lawmakers favor a new
facility to relieve prison overcrowding that would be devoted to treatment,
rather than punishment.
Attitudes about how to handle our drug problem are changing -- none too soon.
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