Pubdate: 11 May 2000 Source: Arlington Morning News (TX) Copyright: 2000 The Arlington Morning News Contact: http://arlingtonnow.com Author: Robert Sharpe Related: the original article this PUB LTE refers to may be found at http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v00/n624/a02.html BILL OF RIGHTS MORE IMPORTANT THAN DRUG WAR Once again a politician is using drug war hysteria to manipulate the public and appear "tough on drugs." U.S. Rep. Joe Barton's proposal to drug test members of Congress is misguided. In this case, it's merely a waste of tax dollars - I doubt any Congressmen will test positive. However, if drug testing increases nationwide, hard drug use will rise and African-Americans will be disproportionately punished. Both hair tests and urinalysis are highly problematic. Urinalysis is virtually useless when it come to detecting hard drugs. As such, it can have the counterproductive effect of encouraging hard drug use when forced upon smokers of relatively harmless marijuana. An employee who uses heroin or crack on a Friday night will test clean on Monday morning, whereas marijuana use might lead to a positive test. This is one of the reasons heroin use is on the rise. Drug testing profiteers (and politicians) do not readily volunteer this information, for obvious reasons. The shortcomings of hair testing are far more sinister. Dark-haired individuals are more likely to test positive when hair tests are used, while fair-haired drug users have a good chance of escaping detection. As such, whites are spared detection while blacks are penalized. This inherent racial bias is reason enough to avoid using hair tests, especially in light of the fact that African-Americans already bear the brunt of anti-drug enforcement. I would like to think that preserving the integrity of the Constitution's Bill of Rights is more important than preserving the failed drug war. Robert Sharpe Students for Sensible Drug Policy George Washington University - --- MAP posted-by: Thunder