Pubdate: Sun, 24 Jun 2001 Source: Oklahoman, The (OK) Copyright: 2001 The Oklahoma Publishing Co Contact: http://www.oklahoman.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/318 Author: Robert Sharpe Note: Sharpe is a program officer with the Lindesmith Center-Drug Policy Foundation, a group that favors decriminalization of marijuana A BETTER WAY To The Editor: Tom Hedrick ("Point of View," June 17) claims the government's $185 million ad campaign is a cost-effective means of reducing adolescent drug use. Hedrick, of course, stands to benefit financially from this taxpayer-funded campaign. With overdose deaths and incarceration rates at record levels, Hedrick's claims that adolescent drug use has gone down (thanks to the ad campaign) is dubious at best. Surveys that rely on self-reporting are useless in this age of zero tolerance. Honesty could very well result in drug-sniffing dogs and locker searches at school. The costly drug war is part of the problem, not the solution. With alcohol prohibition repealed, liquor producers no longer gun each down in drive-by shootings, nor do consumers go blind drinking unregulated bathtub gin. The crime, corruption and overdose deaths attributed to drugs are all direct results of drug prohibition. Drug policies designed to protect children have given rise to a thriving black market with no age controls. This is not to say that all drugs should be legal. The Netherlands has successfully reduced overall drug use by replacing marijuana prohibition with regulation. Dutch rates of drug use are significantly lower than U.S. rates in every category. Separating the hard and soft drug markets and establishing age controls for marijuana has proven more effective than zero tolerance. Although marijuana is relatively harmless compared to alcohol -- pot has never been shown to cause an overdose death -- marijuana prohibition is deadly. Illegal marijuana provides the black market contacts that introduce youth to addictive drugs like meth. This "gateway" is the direct result of a fundamentally flawed policy. Taxing and regulating marijuana is a cost-effective alternative to spending tens of billions annually on a failed drug war. Robert Sharpe Washington, D.C. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth