News (Media Awareness Project) - US: PUB LTE: We Also Can Call Off The War On Drugs |
Title: | US: PUB LTE: We Also Can Call Off The War On Drugs |
Published On: | 1999-02-24 |
Source: | USA Today (US) |
Fetched On: | 2008-09-06 12:39:23 |
WE ENDED VIETNAM WAR 26 YEARS AGO; WE ALSO CAN CALL OFF THE WAR ON DRUGS
The casualties and costs of the war on drugs
continue to mount, and one of its major leaders, Drug Enforcement
Administration chief Thomas Constantine, now is saying we are both
unwilllling and unable to fight.("DEA chief: Drug fight lacks desire,"
News, Friday).
We have been here before. Thirty years ago, the Vietnam conflict was
sucking us dry. There seem to be no end to the human suffering, and we
apparently were addicted to that horrible war. How did it end?
Eventually, when the leaders of the war and media realized that our
country was unwilling and unable to win the battle, we just said "no"
to the war.
Couldn't we apply the lessons so painfully learned in the Vietnam
conflict to our present situation in the drug war? The desire to use
psychoactive drugs appears very strong, and tens of millions of
Americans use illicit drugs. If you include all psychoactive drugs -
alcohol, caffeine, tobacco, performance-enhancing substances and
others - the vast majority of Americans use psychoactive drugs. We
can't defeat them because they are us.
How long must we suffer before we say enough? End the drug war
now.
By Gene Tinelli, M.D.
Addiction Psychiatrist,
State University of New York, Syracuse.
The casualties and costs of the war on drugs
continue to mount, and one of its major leaders, Drug Enforcement
Administration chief Thomas Constantine, now is saying we are both
unwilllling and unable to fight.("DEA chief: Drug fight lacks desire,"
News, Friday).
We have been here before. Thirty years ago, the Vietnam conflict was
sucking us dry. There seem to be no end to the human suffering, and we
apparently were addicted to that horrible war. How did it end?
Eventually, when the leaders of the war and media realized that our
country was unwilling and unable to win the battle, we just said "no"
to the war.
Couldn't we apply the lessons so painfully learned in the Vietnam
conflict to our present situation in the drug war? The desire to use
psychoactive drugs appears very strong, and tens of millions of
Americans use illicit drugs. If you include all psychoactive drugs -
alcohol, caffeine, tobacco, performance-enhancing substances and
others - the vast majority of Americans use psychoactive drugs. We
can't defeat them because they are us.
How long must we suffer before we say enough? End the drug war
now.
By Gene Tinelli, M.D.
Addiction Psychiatrist,
State University of New York, Syracuse.
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