News (Media Awareness Project) - Web: Letter Of The Week |
Title: | Web: Letter Of The Week |
Published On: | 2009-01-09 |
Source: | DrugSense Weekly (DSW) |
Fetched On: | 2009-01-10 18:28:04 |
LETTER OF THE WEEK
DRUG WAR HAS BEEN A FAILURE, SO IT'S TIME TO LEGALIZE THE STUFF
By Michelle Cohen
After nearly four decades of fueling the U.S. war on drugs with over
a trillion tax dollars and 37 million arrests for nonviolent drug
offenses, our confined population has quadrupled, making prison
building the fastest growing industry in the United States.
More than 2.2 million of our citizens are currently incarcerated, and
every year we arrest an additional 1.9 million more, guaranteeing
those prisons will be bursting at their seams. Every year we choose
to continue this war will cost U.S. taxpayers another $69
billion. Despite all the lives we have destroyed and all the money
so ill spent, today illicit drugs are cheaper, more potent and far
easier to get than they were 35 years ago, at the beginning of the
war on drugs.
Meanwhile, people continue dying in our streets while drug barons and
terrorists continue to grow richer than ever before. We would suggest
that this scenario must be the very definition of a failed public
policy. This madness must cease!
We believe that to save lives and lower the rates of disease, crime
and addiction, as well as to conserve tax dollars, we must end drug
prohibition. LEAP [Law Enforcement Against Prohibition] believes
that a system of regulation, and control of production and
distribution, will be far more effective and ethical than one of prohibition.
We do this in hopes that we in law enforcement can regain the
public's respect and trust, which have been greatly diminished by our
involvement in imposing drug prohibition.
Michelle Cohen
Schenectady
The writer is a LEAP volunteer and criminal justice student at SCCC.
Pubdate: Mon, 29 Dec 2008
Source: Daily Gazette (NY)
DRUG WAR HAS BEEN A FAILURE, SO IT'S TIME TO LEGALIZE THE STUFF
By Michelle Cohen
After nearly four decades of fueling the U.S. war on drugs with over
a trillion tax dollars and 37 million arrests for nonviolent drug
offenses, our confined population has quadrupled, making prison
building the fastest growing industry in the United States.
More than 2.2 million of our citizens are currently incarcerated, and
every year we arrest an additional 1.9 million more, guaranteeing
those prisons will be bursting at their seams. Every year we choose
to continue this war will cost U.S. taxpayers another $69
billion. Despite all the lives we have destroyed and all the money
so ill spent, today illicit drugs are cheaper, more potent and far
easier to get than they were 35 years ago, at the beginning of the
war on drugs.
Meanwhile, people continue dying in our streets while drug barons and
terrorists continue to grow richer than ever before. We would suggest
that this scenario must be the very definition of a failed public
policy. This madness must cease!
We believe that to save lives and lower the rates of disease, crime
and addiction, as well as to conserve tax dollars, we must end drug
prohibition. LEAP [Law Enforcement Against Prohibition] believes
that a system of regulation, and control of production and
distribution, will be far more effective and ethical than one of prohibition.
We do this in hopes that we in law enforcement can regain the
public's respect and trust, which have been greatly diminished by our
involvement in imposing drug prohibition.
Michelle Cohen
Schenectady
The writer is a LEAP volunteer and criminal justice student at SCCC.
Pubdate: Mon, 29 Dec 2008
Source: Daily Gazette (NY)
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