Pubdate: Sat, 23 Jun 2001 Source: Washington Times (DC) Section: Part A; Commentary; Editorials; Letters; Pg A11 Copyright: 2001 News World Communications, Inc Contact: http://www.washtimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/492 Author: Robert Sharpe AMERICA, FREE OR 'DRUG-FREE'? The U.S. Supreme Court ruling against law enforcement's use of thermal imaging to fight crime highlights a major flaw in the drug war ("Dimmer switch for high-tech eyes," Commentary, June 19). Simply put, it's not possible to wage a war against consensual vices unless privacy is completely eliminated - along with the Constitution. The United States can be either a free country or a " drug-free" country, but not both. The court ruling stemmed from police use of thermal imaging to detect indoor growing lights used in marijuana cultivation. The drug war is, in large part, a war against marijuana, by far the most popular illicit drug. In 1999, there were 704,812 arrests for marijuana, 620,541 for possession alone. For a drug that has not been shown to cause an overdose death, the allocation of resources to enforce marijuana laws is outrageous. Of course, a reform of marijuana laws would derail the entire drug war gravy train. Marijuana is demonized as a "gateway" drug that leads to harder drugs when, in fact, marijuana prohibition is best described as a gateway policy. Illicit marijuana provides the black-market contacts that introduce users to such harder drugs as heroin. As for protecting children from drugs, the thriving black market has no age controls. Taxing and regulating marijuana is a cost-effective alternative to spending tens of billions annually on a failed drug war. It makes no sense to waste scarce resources on failed policies that finance organized crime, facilitate the use of addictive hard drugs and threaten to undermine our country's Constitution. Robert Sharpe Program officer The Lindesmith Center-Drug Policy Foundation (www.drugpolicy.org) Washington - --- MAP posted-by: Beth