Pubdate: Sun, 23 Jul 2000 Source: Amarillo Globe-News (TX) Copyright: 2000 Amarillo Globe-News Contact: P.O. Box 2091, Amarillo, TX 79166 Fax: (806) 373-0810 Website: http://amarillonet.com/ Forum: http://208.138.68.214:90/eshare/server?action4 Author: Andy Smoother Related: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v00/n987/a04.html ANTI-LEGALIZATION ARGUMENT EXTREME In his July 16 column, John Kanelis takes the usual black-and-white, extremist position regarding illicit drugs, which is typical of the prohibitionist mentality. He uses sweeping statements as absolute truths, even when his assertions have no basis in reality. Legalizing heroin would increase use only if it was accompanied by the kind of blanket mass advertising and promotion presently used by the U.S. alcohol industry to the tune of $25 billion per year. No one is suggesting that drugs would be advertised like alcohol. Kanelis must be joking when he asserts that legalized drugs would be easier to access. How could it be easier than it is now? All prohibition does is encourage dealers to sell drugs to kids because of the profits to be had from the prohibition-inflated prices. You should have learned from your alcohol prohibition, when kids would reel home from school drunk after picking up an illegal, unregulated dose of bathtub gin. When you take control of drugs away from the government and give it to organized crime, criminals will flood the community with drugs, especially targeting children as future consumers. If Kanelis thinks this is a preferable to controlled government regulation, where the black market is all but destroyed and underage people are banned from buying, he should ask himself: What would happen if alcohol and tobacco were criminalized tomorrow? There's plenty of precedent to tell us exactly what would happen. Overnight we would have these two previously legal drugs being pushed to kids vigorously at inflated prices, and all the usual side effects of death, corruption of police, enrichment of crime cartels, huge public taxes to pay for prisons and hospital treatment, and more addicts than we started with! ANDY SMOOTHER, Roselands, Sydney, Australia - --- MAP posted-by: Derek