News (Media Awareness Project) - US TX PUB LTE: Legal Drugs Tax A Cash Cow |
Title: | US TX PUB LTE: Legal Drugs Tax A Cash Cow |
Published On: | 1999-10-22 |
Source: | Houston Chronicle (TX) |
Fetched On: | 2008-09-05 17:25:59 |
LEGAL DRUGS TAX A CASH COW
New Mexico Gov. Gary Johnson's ideas about legalizing drugs are really
worth consideration, even though the drug czar, Gen. Barry McCaffrey,
made a special trip out to New Mexico to ridicule Johnson's ideas as
stupid and preposterous.
The Oct. 10 Chronicle article quoted McCaffrey as excoriating Johnson
for "undermining the drug war." I can understand the drug czar's
attitude: Without the problem, he wouldn't have a job.
He'd be for spending more money in drug interdiction such as
increasing 8,000 Border Patrol types to 20,000. (Whatever happened to
"less" government?)
I wonder how much money the drug lobby spends to encourage politicians
to subvert drug legalization? Is it cynical of me to believe
politicians have a vested, financial interest in keeping the game alive?
Looking at the Netherlands and Switzerland, two countries that have
legalized drugs and contained the problem to a placid, passive group
doomed to stay under the influence of drugs forever.
>From a political aspect, we should test this by allowing one or two
years of legalized drugs. If it doesn't work, we can always go back to
our old spending ways. I predict the game would dry up and
interdiction expenses would wither on the vine.
David C. Callaway,
Houston
New Mexico Gov. Gary Johnson's ideas about legalizing drugs are really
worth consideration, even though the drug czar, Gen. Barry McCaffrey,
made a special trip out to New Mexico to ridicule Johnson's ideas as
stupid and preposterous.
The Oct. 10 Chronicle article quoted McCaffrey as excoriating Johnson
for "undermining the drug war." I can understand the drug czar's
attitude: Without the problem, he wouldn't have a job.
He'd be for spending more money in drug interdiction such as
increasing 8,000 Border Patrol types to 20,000. (Whatever happened to
"less" government?)
I wonder how much money the drug lobby spends to encourage politicians
to subvert drug legalization? Is it cynical of me to believe
politicians have a vested, financial interest in keeping the game alive?
Looking at the Netherlands and Switzerland, two countries that have
legalized drugs and contained the problem to a placid, passive group
doomed to stay under the influence of drugs forever.
>From a political aspect, we should test this by allowing one or two
years of legalized drugs. If it doesn't work, we can always go back to
our old spending ways. I predict the game would dry up and
interdiction expenses would wither on the vine.
David C. Callaway,
Houston
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