News (Media Awareness Project) - Web: Letter of the Week |
Title: | Web: Letter of the Week |
Published On: | 2006-09-22 |
Source: | DrugSense Weekly (DSW) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-13 02:44:02 |
LETTER OF THE WEEK
DRUG ILLUSIONS
By David S. Brannon
Two articles in your Aug. 27 paper touted renewed efforts by North
Carolina law enforcement to reduce drug-related crime and violence.
Those efforts will be rewarded with a short-term illusion of
improvement. The criminal justice system, however, is not the place
where our society can come to terms with the existence of drugs. Many
people try drugs. Only a few ever abuse them.
If, tomorrow, all drugs became legal and available, I doubt anyone
reading this letter would jump up, shouting in joy, "Finally, I can
try heroin!" Nope.
And so what if people do drugs? If their drug use harms no one else,
it's no one else's business. If their drug use is harming themselves,
we can change many of those behaviors with a public health
approach. It's worked with teen smoking and teen pregnancy; we could
at least try with the issue of drug abuse. It's for sure that what we
are doing now does not work.
We can't keep spending billions on a drug war that doesn't achieve
its stated goals. But we do. And it's time to stop.
David S. Brannon
Raleigh
(The writer is an attorney.)
Pubdate - Mon, 18 Sep 2006
Source - News & Observer (Raleigh, NC)
Referenced - Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v06/n1134/a07.html
DRUG ILLUSIONS
By David S. Brannon
Two articles in your Aug. 27 paper touted renewed efforts by North
Carolina law enforcement to reduce drug-related crime and violence.
Those efforts will be rewarded with a short-term illusion of
improvement. The criminal justice system, however, is not the place
where our society can come to terms with the existence of drugs. Many
people try drugs. Only a few ever abuse them.
If, tomorrow, all drugs became legal and available, I doubt anyone
reading this letter would jump up, shouting in joy, "Finally, I can
try heroin!" Nope.
And so what if people do drugs? If their drug use harms no one else,
it's no one else's business. If their drug use is harming themselves,
we can change many of those behaviors with a public health
approach. It's worked with teen smoking and teen pregnancy; we could
at least try with the issue of drug abuse. It's for sure that what we
are doing now does not work.
We can't keep spending billions on a drug war that doesn't achieve
its stated goals. But we do. And it's time to stop.
David S. Brannon
Raleigh
(The writer is an attorney.)
Pubdate - Mon, 18 Sep 2006
Source - News & Observer (Raleigh, NC)
Referenced - Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v06/n1134/a07.html
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