News (Media Awareness Project) - US FL: PUB LTE: American Airlines And America's War On Drugs |
Title: | US FL: PUB LTE: American Airlines And America's War On Drugs |
Published On: | 1999-09-05 |
Source: | Miami Herald (FL) |
Fetched On: | 2008-09-05 21:17:12 |
subject: American Airlines And America's War On Drugs
Why is anyone surprised that 60 low-level ground crew and contract
people from American Airlines in Miami were arrested for smuggling
huge amounts of heroin and other drugs into this country?
They are only the last tentacle of a vast smuggling operation that has
corrupted everything it touches with its billions of dollars:
prosecutors, agents, whole police departments and legislators here and
abroad. How else do you think that some 400 tons of illegal drugs get
safely into this country each year? We capture a few of the low-level
distributors while the big organizers of the cartels are literally
untouchable. They have enough money to pay everyone.
The drug "war" was lost a long time ago. It has failed at interdiction
and prosecution. It has failed at the source and on the streets. It
has failed even to lessen the flow of these drugs. The corruption of
drug money has corrupted every segment of American society. The time
has long since passed to consider a radical change in our drug policy.
How about slow legalization starting with marijuana? The results can't
be any worse than they are now even while we can divert billions used
in the failed "war" to rehab and preventive programs. We can always go
back to the same old failure of the past called illegalization. We
have nothing to lose.
PETER J. RIGA
Houston, Texas
Why is anyone surprised that 60 low-level ground crew and contract
people from American Airlines in Miami were arrested for smuggling
huge amounts of heroin and other drugs into this country?
They are only the last tentacle of a vast smuggling operation that has
corrupted everything it touches with its billions of dollars:
prosecutors, agents, whole police departments and legislators here and
abroad. How else do you think that some 400 tons of illegal drugs get
safely into this country each year? We capture a few of the low-level
distributors while the big organizers of the cartels are literally
untouchable. They have enough money to pay everyone.
The drug "war" was lost a long time ago. It has failed at interdiction
and prosecution. It has failed at the source and on the streets. It
has failed even to lessen the flow of these drugs. The corruption of
drug money has corrupted every segment of American society. The time
has long since passed to consider a radical change in our drug policy.
How about slow legalization starting with marijuana? The results can't
be any worse than they are now even while we can divert billions used
in the failed "war" to rehab and preventive programs. We can always go
back to the same old failure of the past called illegalization. We
have nothing to lose.
PETER J. RIGA
Houston, Texas
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