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News (Media Awareness Project) - US NY: PUB LTE: There's No Easy Solution to the Current Drug
Title:US NY: PUB LTE: There's No Easy Solution to the Current Drug
Published On:2005-07-03
Source:Times Union (Albany, NY)
Fetched On:2008-01-16 01:08:39
THERE'S NO EASY SOLUTION TO THE CURRENT DRUG WAR IN THIS COUNTRY

George Will's attacks on marijuana ("Fighting illicit drugs," June 16)
and brain function are nonsense. Carl Sagan was a lifelong user. While
I do not recommend marijuana use, it is less harmful than tobacco or
alcohol.

Will's comparison to prohibition was more interesting. "[F]or all its
bad effects," Will says it lowered alcohol consumption. Prohibition's
effect on consumption is questionable. For starters, it's unclear how
alcohol consumption could have been measured when it was illegal. But
other effects have been asserted: (1) Measured consumption of alcohol
did initially fall, but then rose steadily until repeal; (2) alcohol
became more dangerous to consume; (3) crime increased, especially
organized crime; (4) Corruption became a much more serious problem;
(5) many drinkers switched to opium, cocaine, and other drugs; (6)
alcohol consumption shifted from beer and wine to harder liquors. (See
http://www.cato.org/pubs/pas/pa-157.html .)

It has been 90 years since heroin and cocaine were first prohibited,
67 years for marijuana, and a bit more than 30 years since the
so-called War on Drugs was declared. Drugs have indeed become more
potent -- just as prohibition led to stronger liquor. A smuggler wants
to carry the most potent product in the smallest package.

Illicit drugs are more dangerous to consume because they are
unregulated. The illegal drug trade causes gang and crime problems,
while the modern legal markets for alcohol and tobacco do not. The
parallels are numerous because our drug policy is the same failed
policy that was tried with alcohol.

Most of us agree that drugs are bad. There is no easy solution. Our
current approach -- the drug war -- is prohibition by another name.
Whatever happened to learning from history?

WARREN REDLICH

Albany
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