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News (Media Awareness Project) - US IL: Column: Smart Police Chief
Title:US IL: Column: Smart Police Chief
Published On:2002-06-27
Source:Rock River Times (IL)
Fetched On:2008-01-23 03:41:04
SMART POLICE CHIEF

We have one very smart police chief in Rockford. In an article
published on the AP newswire, our very own Rockford, Ill. Police Chief
Jeff Nielsen said that with the recent changes in FBI manpower
allocations, he envisions fewer arrests on major drug cases by the
FBI.

"While you wish they didn't have to ( pull agents ), you understand,"
Nielsen said. "If a slightly lower arrest rate means they have a
higher arrest rate in terrorism, that's good."

He made this remark in response to news that the FBI was shifting more
than 400 agents from drugs to terrorism.

Last year after the 9/11 attacks, Atty. Gen. Ashcroft said, "We cannot
do everything we once did, because lives now depend on us doing a few
things very well." Of course, he really didn't mean it. The FBI has
been very busy in California targeting legal (in that state) marijuana
dispensaries. As if keeping the sick and dying from that next toke was
more important than keeping aircraft suiciders from crashing into tall
buildings.

I do think his statement, at least, is in fact a tacit admission that
they were not doing anything too well. I think this is proof positive
that while the drug war grinds on, there is no end in sight. We are
not yet to the point where they will admit that the prohibition they
are enforcing is the cause of most of the crime associated with the
drug problem.

I think it is interesting to look back at how myopic drug prohibition
made the FBI in the recent past, Raed Hijazi, a confidential FBI drug
informant in the early 90s, begged the FBI to look into the activities
of al-Qaeda terrorists. All the FBI was interested in was another
photo op drug bust. This was reported in the 17 Oct 2001 Boston
Herald. This report was too late to prevent 9/11. But the information
can be used today to course correct our government.

And course correcting it needs, badly. The FBI is still way
over-committed to drugs. Arianna Huffington says that even with the
reorganization, there will be more than 2,000 agents still on
prohibition and less than 1,600 fighting terrorism. An improvement is
not a revolution. And what is badly needed is a revolution.

What is needed is a change in priorities. Drug prohibition can never
give us a drug-free society. It is an impossibility. We have been
fighting heroin for more than 80 years. Are we any closer to a
heroin-free society than when we started? Has it worked out any better
than alcohol prohibition? The fact is that prohibition does not solve
substance abuse problems. It only adds crime to the mix.

Our police chief is smart enough to see some of this. Very good.
Because it takes him out of the ranks of those who believe no
sacrifice is too great to keep people off drugs--even a sacrifice of
3,000 Americans by terrorists in one day. It is time to get over our
drug war addiction. Lives are at stake.

One life that could use some help these days is E.J.'s. Rumor has it
that work release for prisoners may be closed in Rockford in the next
2-4 months. E.J. would like to get clemency so he does not have to
serve out his time away from his nearly blind mother and his wife.
Please write a letter of reference preferably on your company's
letterhead to Representative Chuck Jefferson, 200 S. Wyman, Rockford,
IL 61101. You should probably write "re: Edward Pagel" on the left
side of the envelope so Chuck can recognize it quickly. E.J. is not a
violent criminal and deserves to be back in the community.

If you would like to find out more about what a free country was
really supposed to be like, you can read copies of the Constitution,
the Federalist Papers, the Declaration of Independence, and other good
stuff for free:

http://mywebpage.netscape.com/msimon669/index.html.

M. Simon is an industrial controls designer and Free Market
Green
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