News (Media Awareness Project) - US LA: PUB LTE: Take Marijuana Off the Front Lines |
Title: | US LA: PUB LTE: Take Marijuana Off the Front Lines |
Published On: | 2003-02-19 |
Source: | Times, The (Lafayette, LA) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-21 00:02:37 |
TAKE MARIJUANA OFF THE FRONT LINES
I appreciate The Times of Acadiana publishing two outstanding letters by
Robert Sharpe (Letters to the Editor: Government misinforms On Marijuana,
Dec. 11) and Kirk Muse (Letters to the Editor: Marijuana's History a Benign
One, Dec. 11). Take marijuana out of the drug war.
The war on drugs today is mostly about marijuana. Marijuana arrests,
convictions, incarcerations and the seizure of property in marijuana cases
constitute the great majority of "drug-war incidents." Without marijuana
prohibition, the War on Drugs and its bloated budgets would simply not be
justifiable, nor the DEA, nor foreign intervention, nor political anti-drug
posturing; without marijuana prohibition the whole War on Drugs would soon
fall apart.
America is in the throes of an addiction, to be sure. But it is to drug
prohibition far more than to drug use. Enormous and wildly increasing
budgets are squandered on ever-higher doses of the drug prohibition habit,
and vehement denials that the prohibition habit is the problem are heard
along with pronouncements that with one more big fix of "enforcement and
interdiction" the drug problem will be resolved. And in great irrational
fear of the imagined rigors of withdrawal, the addict is ready to commit
any disgrace, deception, crime or doublethink whatsoever to get his fix.
Drug prohibition has become a "monkey on the back" of democracy itself.
Larry Seguin
Lisbon, N.Y.
I appreciate The Times of Acadiana publishing two outstanding letters by
Robert Sharpe (Letters to the Editor: Government misinforms On Marijuana,
Dec. 11) and Kirk Muse (Letters to the Editor: Marijuana's History a Benign
One, Dec. 11). Take marijuana out of the drug war.
The war on drugs today is mostly about marijuana. Marijuana arrests,
convictions, incarcerations and the seizure of property in marijuana cases
constitute the great majority of "drug-war incidents." Without marijuana
prohibition, the War on Drugs and its bloated budgets would simply not be
justifiable, nor the DEA, nor foreign intervention, nor political anti-drug
posturing; without marijuana prohibition the whole War on Drugs would soon
fall apart.
America is in the throes of an addiction, to be sure. But it is to drug
prohibition far more than to drug use. Enormous and wildly increasing
budgets are squandered on ever-higher doses of the drug prohibition habit,
and vehement denials that the prohibition habit is the problem are heard
along with pronouncements that with one more big fix of "enforcement and
interdiction" the drug problem will be resolved. And in great irrational
fear of the imagined rigors of withdrawal, the addict is ready to commit
any disgrace, deception, crime or doublethink whatsoever to get his fix.
Drug prohibition has become a "monkey on the back" of democracy itself.
Larry Seguin
Lisbon, N.Y.
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