News (Media Awareness Project) - US OR: PUB LTE: Focus On Meth, Not Marijuana |
Title: | US OR: PUB LTE: Focus On Meth, Not Marijuana |
Published On: | 2005-07-31 |
Source: | Oregonian, The (Portland, OR) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-15 22:18:23 |
FOCUS ON METH, NOT MARIJUANA
Your July 27 editorial, "Out of touch on meth," was right on target. While
local governments are struggling with a methamphetamine epidemic, the
Office of National Drug Control Policy is spending millions on a
reefer-madness-revisited ad campaign.
This reflects a bizarre sense of priorities.
A National Association of Counties survey found that the vast majority of
county officials report that meth is the biggest drug problem. Local law
enforcement is where the rubber meets the road. These are the public safety
professionals who deal with drug offenses on a daily basis.
And it's not marijuana that concerns them, but meth.
Meanwhile, an out-of-touch federal government continues to be obsessed with
marijuana, even going so far as to prosecute terminally ill patients who
use medical marijuana for relief.
The tax dollars wasted on the Office of National Drug Control Policy's
misleading anti-marijuana campaign would be better spent on treatment for
meth addicts.
ROBERT SHARPE
Policy analyst Common Sense for Drug Policy
Washington, D.C
Your July 27 editorial, "Out of touch on meth," was right on target. While
local governments are struggling with a methamphetamine epidemic, the
Office of National Drug Control Policy is spending millions on a
reefer-madness-revisited ad campaign.
This reflects a bizarre sense of priorities.
A National Association of Counties survey found that the vast majority of
county officials report that meth is the biggest drug problem. Local law
enforcement is where the rubber meets the road. These are the public safety
professionals who deal with drug offenses on a daily basis.
And it's not marijuana that concerns them, but meth.
Meanwhile, an out-of-touch federal government continues to be obsessed with
marijuana, even going so far as to prosecute terminally ill patients who
use medical marijuana for relief.
The tax dollars wasted on the Office of National Drug Control Policy's
misleading anti-marijuana campaign would be better spent on treatment for
meth addicts.
ROBERT SHARPE
Policy analyst Common Sense for Drug Policy
Washington, D.C
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