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News (Media Awareness Project) - US CA: OPED: The Eternal Drug War
Title:US CA: OPED: The Eternal Drug War
Published On:2011-01-27
Source:Chico News & Review, The (CA)
Fetched On:2011-03-09 16:47:38
THE ETERNAL DRUG WAR

Despite the Horrific Casualties From the War on Drugs, Most Elected
Leaders Are Fearful of Seeking Peace

The Afghanistan War sometimes seems interminable. It just became the
longest hot war in U.S. history.

Meanwhile, our War on Drugs is quietly building its own longevity
record. This war dates back to the Nixon administration and shows
little sign of abating. The latest skirmish just concluded with
California's failed pot referendum. Yet on that same Election Day,
Arizona became the 15th state to approve medical marijuana-a
testament to the public's indifference to the war's moralizers.

Elsewhere, this war isn't going well. Who knows how many luckless
folks were murdered in Mexico, caught in the destructive drug-fueled
gang violence?

Our marijuana use keeps climbing, despite the Drug War. The Golden
State grows so much cannabis that even if California's voters had
passed Proposition 19, local smugglers might have been largely
unaffected. Nationally though, Big Liquor was truly worried. Not only
would legal pot have cut into its business, but a recent study
concluded that alcohol is even more socially destructive than heroin.
Marijuana seems tame by comparison.

The prison industry was also anxious about the outcome of
California's vote. Current drug laws keep those jails brimming with
small-time users who pose no threat to anyone. This front of the war
keeps plenty of cops, guards, prosecutors, defenders, wardens, and
builders and suppliers of prisons out of the unemployment lines.

Not to be seen as impotent, Congress leaped into action doing what it
does best. It created a blue-ribbon commission.

The commission would do well to consider the example of other
countries. Portugal has decriminalized just about everything and has
reaped the benefits of less crime, less law enforcement, and even
less drug usage. Switzerland leads in treating heroin medically
instead of criminally, with a similar happy outcome. Canada is
following suit, over stern U.S. protests.

Meanwhile our aggressive cocaine eradication assault in Colombia has
driven much of the production to Peru. A similar assault on key poppy
provinces in Afghanistan has successfully driven heroin production
elsewhere. Whoopie! Attacking sources of drug supplies works about as
well now as similar approaches did during Prohibition.

Despite the Drug War's horrific casualties, most elected leaders are
fearful of seeking peace. Some of their campaign donors would lose
profits, and their opponents could stir up fear and hate. Sounds a
lot like the War on Terror.
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