Pubdate: Wed, 28 Feb 2001 Source: Sun, The (UK) Copyright: News Group Newspapers Ltd, 2001 Contact: http://www.the-sun.co.uk/ Author: Robert Sharpe PARENTS SHARE THE BLAME FOR BRITAIN'S TEEN TERRORS AS British attempts to tackle drink and drugs are failing, why not consider an alternative approach? Despite dramatically lower per capita spending on the drug problem, the Netherlands has reduced overall drug use by replacing cannabis prohibition with regulation. Separating the hard and soft drug markets and establishing controls for age has proven more effective than zero tolerance. At the moment, cannabis, the most popular illicit drug in Britain, provides a gateway for the criminals who introduce users to hard drugs. Sadly, mainstream politicians, many of them former cannabis smokers, prefer preaching to pragmatism. They continue to allow a thriving black market to poison teenagers. ROBERT SHARPE, Lindesmith Center -Drug Policy Foundation, Washington DC - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake