Pubdate: Tue, 27 Feb 2001 Source: Seattle Times (WA) Copyright: 2001 The Seattle Times Company Contact: P.O. Box 70, Seattle, WA 98111 Fax: (206) 382-6760 Website: http://www.seattletimes.com/ WAR ON DRUGS Treatment, Yes, But What If The User Doesn't Want It? In Mindy Cameron's column "An American epiphany in the War on Drugs" (Times, Feb. 18), she notes, having watched the movie "Traffic," that the current government stance with regards to drugs - namely war - is a failure. Cameron goes on, as does the movie, to advocate a change of approach: from fighting the drug dealer to treating the drug user. The idea that this country might devote much more funding and energy to treatment seems more right-minded at first blush, but, the fact is, forced, involuntary "treatment" does not work. In order for treatment to work at all, the person being treated has to want to involve himself in treatment. Period. A fact that is never acknowledged in our national debate about drugs is that a lot of people who use drugs use them occasionally, recreationally and responsibly. Despite the stereotype, the average drug user is gainfully employed and is a net contributor to his community. For such a person, drug use is not a problem and it's no business of government. I know that this is going to sound like a radical idea, but maybe government should just leave people alone when they're not harming anyone else. - - Lloyd Gaarder, Sioux Falls, S.D. Wrong Impression Even in the movie "Traffic," which reveals the drug war in all its misguided, tragic lunacy, drug users are portrayed as degenerates and chemical slaves. The drug czar's daughter goes from bright schoolgirl to pathetic crack whore in the blink of an eye. Come on. Even for heroin users, the most reliable estimates are that a mere 10 percent become addicted. Not great news, but on a par with booze. The simple truth is that the vast majority of drug users use drugs recreationally and are no more in need of detox and counseling than is a tavern patron. People take drugs to enjoy themselves, not destroy themselves. The biggest myth about drugs is that drug use equals drug abuse. The truth is that only the unfortunate few come to ruin, and most do so with a legal drug anyway. - - Bill Muse, Seattle Demand Change The problem is not that Mexico and Colombia and a host of other countries supply us with drugs, but that our demand for them is so great. As long as Americans are prepared to pay these enormous sums, someone will step in to supply the drugs. So how do we reduce our demand for drugs? By incarcerating addicts. What a thoughtful approach. We hear it was President Nixon's campaign staff in 1968 that thought up the idea of the War on Drugs, and that $40 billion was spent by the government conducting this war last year. So now we have had an epiphany regarding the failure of this 33-year-old war? I'm sorry, Mindy Cameron, but the facts have been staring us in the face since the beginning, but our only answer has been ignorance and a refusal to face those facts. All the police SWAT teams, attack helicopters sent to Colombia, new prisons and prison sentences have not reduced, nor ever will reduce, our demand for drugs. If one must receive an "epiphany" to realize this, it speaks volumes to our own sad state of affairs. - - Rick Meisenholder, Bellevue Mind Control Addictions do not meet the nosology of disease. Addictions are stigmatizing terms that are culturally conditioned. Americans fighting addiction is equivalent to Haitians fighting voodoo or, more correctly, St. George out fighting dragons, on which all scapegoat persecutions are modeled (there were no such things as dragons, but St. George "saved" us from them nonetheless). Taking the "wrong" social drugs is a vice, not a crime or a medical disorder. Sentencing people to "treatment" or helping people who do not want your help is called persecution. Harming people in the name of helping them is as old as mankind is itself. The ugliest aspect of drug prevention is that in order to control what substances a man may put in his body, the state must also control what ideas a man may put in his head. The state in an ostensibly free country has no business controlling the ideas of its citizens. - - Chris Buors, Winnipeg, Manitoba Logic Lesson Economics 101, a quiz. Text: There are immense profits in illegal drug traffic. Question: Why don't government officials support legislation removing these profits? Answer: Because there are immense profits in illegal drug traffic. - - Tom Difloe, Camano Island - --- MAP posted-by: Josh Sutcliffe