News (Media Awareness Project) - US MI: PUB LTE: More Harm Than Good |
Title: | US MI: PUB LTE: More Harm Than Good |
Published On: | 2011-02-02 |
Source: | Metro Times (Detroit, MI) |
Fetched On: | 2011-03-09 14:44:09 |
MORE HARM THAN GOOD
Thanks to Metro Times for publishing Larry Gabriel's column, "Crisis
on the corner: Should we legalize drugs to save the hood?" (Jan. 19).
When we reach the point in public drug policy discussion that we
actually put the drug war (Prohibition II) under the microscope, its
associated harms will be seen to be far more damaging to our social
fabric than any amount of drugs -- legal or illegal.
Michigan State sociology professor Carl Taylor's moaning does not
belie the fact that only because of the drug war do we have police in
cities and towns across the U.S. raiding private homes like armed
thugs. While they may be armed with weapons and search warrants,
their cause is corrupt and a serious threat to liberty's principles.
For cases less drastic than what we have happening to us at the hands
of our own government in our nation today, our founders felt
compelled to boot out the British.
No longer can we be called the "Land of the Free" when we have become
the "Land of the Most Incarcerated."
Portugal has decriminalized all drugs and is seeing successes in both
health and law enforcement issues. Switzerland has had the HAT
program (Heroin Assisted Treatment) for more than a decade, and their
drug crimes have seen phenomenal decreases, and needle-borne
infections have plummeted -- a success all around.
Yet here we are, knee-deep in debt, and we continue to arrest
hundreds of thousands of people a year for cannabis possession. Being
broke is fixable. Being broke and stupid is usually disastrous, if
not completely fatal.
Allan Erickson, Eugene
Thanks to Metro Times for publishing Larry Gabriel's column, "Crisis
on the corner: Should we legalize drugs to save the hood?" (Jan. 19).
When we reach the point in public drug policy discussion that we
actually put the drug war (Prohibition II) under the microscope, its
associated harms will be seen to be far more damaging to our social
fabric than any amount of drugs -- legal or illegal.
Michigan State sociology professor Carl Taylor's moaning does not
belie the fact that only because of the drug war do we have police in
cities and towns across the U.S. raiding private homes like armed
thugs. While they may be armed with weapons and search warrants,
their cause is corrupt and a serious threat to liberty's principles.
For cases less drastic than what we have happening to us at the hands
of our own government in our nation today, our founders felt
compelled to boot out the British.
No longer can we be called the "Land of the Free" when we have become
the "Land of the Most Incarcerated."
Portugal has decriminalized all drugs and is seeing successes in both
health and law enforcement issues. Switzerland has had the HAT
program (Heroin Assisted Treatment) for more than a decade, and their
drug crimes have seen phenomenal decreases, and needle-borne
infections have plummeted -- a success all around.
Yet here we are, knee-deep in debt, and we continue to arrest
hundreds of thousands of people a year for cannabis possession. Being
broke is fixable. Being broke and stupid is usually disastrous, if
not completely fatal.
Allan Erickson, Eugene
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