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News (Media Awareness Project) - US SC: PUB LTE: U.S. Drug War
Title:US SC: PUB LTE: U.S. Drug War
Published On:2002-09-19
Source:Post and Courier, The (SC)
Fetched On:2008-01-22 01:17:16
U.S. DRUG WAR

A careful look at recent headlines in The Post and Courier tells an
important story about the U.S. government's War on Drugs. On Aug. 18:
"Homicide rate spikes after summer killings" - a story about local murders
often blamed on illegal drug involvement. On Aug. 20: "Crack raids hit
suppliers" - about yet another local neighborhood drug sweep to drive out
illegal drug sellers. On Aug. 26: "Record 6.6 million in U.S. prison
system" - reporting that one in every 32 adults in the U.S. is in prison,
on probation or parole, many for drug possession, drug selling or
drug-related violence.

But the kicker is this on Sept. 6: "Survey finds increase in use of drugs."
The U.S. government's most recent national survey found that more people
than ever, including more teens, are using illegal drugs, despite locking
up all those folks. Stupidity is defined as repeatedly doing the same thing
and expecting a different result. The U.S. government has been fighting
this punitive drug war since the Harrison Narcotic Act in 1914! Since then,
not only has illegal drug use increased, the government's War on Drugs has
made society's situation far worse.

Today the United States, with just 5 percent of the world's population, has
25 percent of the world's prisoners. Despite our zero-tolerance, punitive
drug policy, the U.S. has more drug-related violence than any other
developed country in the world. The very illegality of drugs makes them so
valuable that some terrorist groups use drug profits to finance their
terrorism. Our government's anti-drug budget increases each year - it now
exceeds $20 billion annually plus another billion every couple of years to
try to wipe out coca and poppies in Latin America.

Please note that no one is being murdered in turf wars over beer or
cigarettes, both made from potentially dangerous drugs. Few people steal to
support their alcohol or tobacco habits. The U.S. was smart enough to end
alcohol prohibition in 1933 after 13 violent years spent fighting an
unwinnable war. When alcohol prohibition ended, the murder rate decreased
13 consecutive years!

It is time to change the U.S. drug policy and decriminalize drugs. Time to
address drug abuse as the medical and social problem it is. Time for the
government, instead of dealers and terrorists, to regulate and distribute
drugs, educate society about the stupidity of drug abuse, and hold people
accountable for crimes they commit while using drugs, just as we now do for
alcohol.

After 88 years, haven't we been losing the drug war long enough?

SHARON FRATEPIETRO
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