News (Media Awareness Project) - US: PUB LTE: The Useless War Against Drugs |
Title: | US: PUB LTE: The Useless War Against Drugs |
Published On: | 1999-03-19 |
Source: | Wall Street Journal (NY) |
Fetched On: | 2008-09-06 10:24:54 |
THE USELESS WAR AGAINST DRUGS
It was astonishing and mildly heartening to read John J. DiIulio Jr.'s
"Two Million Prisoners Are Enough" (editorial page, March 12).
Astonishing because it seems possible that the Journal's editorial
board (which has in the past shown its approval of Mr. DiIulio's
research) is beginning to see the light at the end of the drug war
tunnel--namely, that after three decades and hundreds of billions of
dollars, the war is not only lost, but, as Milton Friedman says,
immoral; and that the "benefits" to society as a whole and families in
particular for throwing non-violent drug offenders into jail don't
benefit anyone except lawyers and DEA employees, and are infinitely
more harmful than the effects of, say, smoking a joint.
Yes, get rid of mandatory-minimum sentences and release drug-only
offenders; but also decriminalize the taking of drugs, and when there
are problems of abuse, let families, churches, support groups and the
medical community attend to that issue.
Steven R. Hurlburt
Atlanta
It was astonishing and mildly heartening to read John J. DiIulio Jr.'s
"Two Million Prisoners Are Enough" (editorial page, March 12).
Astonishing because it seems possible that the Journal's editorial
board (which has in the past shown its approval of Mr. DiIulio's
research) is beginning to see the light at the end of the drug war
tunnel--namely, that after three decades and hundreds of billions of
dollars, the war is not only lost, but, as Milton Friedman says,
immoral; and that the "benefits" to society as a whole and families in
particular for throwing non-violent drug offenders into jail don't
benefit anyone except lawyers and DEA employees, and are infinitely
more harmful than the effects of, say, smoking a joint.
Yes, get rid of mandatory-minimum sentences and release drug-only
offenders; but also decriminalize the taking of drugs, and when there
are problems of abuse, let families, churches, support groups and the
medical community attend to that issue.
Steven R. Hurlburt
Atlanta
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