News (Media Awareness Project) - US NY: PUB LTE: Time to End Prohibition for Drugs? |
Title: | US NY: PUB LTE: Time to End Prohibition for Drugs? |
Published On: | 2009-06-18 |
Source: | New York Times (NY) |
Fetched On: | 2009-06-18 16:29:48 |
TIME TO END PROHIBITION FOR DRUGS?
To the Editor:
Nicholas D. Kristof makes clear the price paid for the wrongheaded
"war on drugs." He notes Norm Stamper's experience as a young police
officer in San Diego in 1967 thinking that he could be "doing real
police work" rather than breaking down the doors of marijuana users.
I would argue that the failed war on drugs is worse than useless; it
has undermined the rule of law. In 1967 I was a young college student
encountering the drug culture on an East Coast campus. I had the
experience of having my friends arrested and getting midnight calls to
bail them out. At that time it was even illegal, where I lived, merely
to be in the presence of someone smoking pot.
I remember saying to myself that America was busy criminalizing its
youth for no good reason. Making common practice a criminal offense
undermines respect for the law.
The stupidity was obvious to me as a teenager, and to Norm Stamper as
a young cop 40 years ago. Where has our political and law enforcement
leadership been all this time?
Richard Poeton
Seattle
To the Editor:
Nicholas D. Kristof makes clear the price paid for the wrongheaded
"war on drugs." He notes Norm Stamper's experience as a young police
officer in San Diego in 1967 thinking that he could be "doing real
police work" rather than breaking down the doors of marijuana users.
I would argue that the failed war on drugs is worse than useless; it
has undermined the rule of law. In 1967 I was a young college student
encountering the drug culture on an East Coast campus. I had the
experience of having my friends arrested and getting midnight calls to
bail them out. At that time it was even illegal, where I lived, merely
to be in the presence of someone smoking pot.
I remember saying to myself that America was busy criminalizing its
youth for no good reason. Making common practice a criminal offense
undermines respect for the law.
The stupidity was obvious to me as a teenager, and to Norm Stamper as
a young cop 40 years ago. Where has our political and law enforcement
leadership been all this time?
Richard Poeton
Seattle
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