Pubdate: Wed, 21 Mar 2001 Source: Mountain Xpress (NC) Copyright: 2001 Mountain Xpress Contact: PO Box 144, Asheville, NC 28802 Fax: (828) 251 1311 Website: http://www.mountainx.com/ Author: Robert Wilson THE WARS ON DRUGS AND COMMUNISM The movie Traffic has had the salutary effect of increasing the discussion about the War on Drug. This would be fine, except the continued misuse of the phrase "War on Drugs" perpetuates misconceptions about drugs in general and about the potential real hazards inherent in the use of particular substances. Drugs and drug users are the Communists of the turn of the century. They are demonized. Official agencies of government create hysteria about them. Thousands, if not millions, of innocent peoples' lives are irrevocably harmed in the course of attempting to rid the land of this menace. Just as we almost destroyed Vietnam to save Vietnam, we are now destroying the lives of many Americans in the belief that we are saving them. Some people were able to justify the destruction of the Vietnamese people because that war was about real estate and who would own it -- not about people. There can be no such justification for ruining lives in the course of trying to keep people from using drugs. The War on Drugs will not be won by putting more "resources" into it, any more than the Vietnam War would have been won by increasing our commitment. Vietnam was unwinnable because [the war] was based on faulty assumptions. The same is true of the War on Drugs. The drugs that governmental agencies -- particularly law-enforcement and criminal-justice agencies, but also educational, physical-health and mental-health organizations -- would like us to not use or use less of or use only in certain circumscribed modes are mood-altering substances. These are chemical compounds that improve our mood when we take them. They make us feel better. They are categorized in many ways. There are legal drugs and nonlegal drugs. There are prescription drugs and over-the-counter drugs. There are social or recreational drugs. There are controlled substances, some of which have legally accepted uses and some of which don't. There are substances that are used because of their mood-altering properties that are not meant by their makers to be used that way. The War on Drugs targets users of these substances irrationally and inconsistently. Among the mood-altering drugs that have the most profound health consequences in the United States are alcohol and tobacco, which, aside from caffeine, are the least regulated of the commonly used substances of abuse. Adult users of these substances are not made into criminals for the simple act of obtaining them or having them in their possession. Somewhere in the neighborhood of 400,000 people will die this year in this country due to the effects of using tobacco products in the way in which the manufacturer intended them to be used. Some 150,000 will die from causes related to the use of alcohol While alcohol has some medicinal properties, its primary use throughout history has been as a mood enhancer. Alcohol also is potentially toxic. Another drug which has many more medicinal uses than alcohol, and which is also used because of its mood-enhancing properties, is marijuana. Marijuana is not toxic. That is, unlike alcohol, there is no known lethal dose of the drug. Yet adult users of marijuana face the real possibility of serving long sentences in prison or other criminal sanctions for merely having marijuana in their possession or for talking to others about obtaining it. Of course, the use of mood-altering substances is potentially dangerous to some people in certain circumstances. Hundreds of thousands -- possibly millions -- of lives each year are negatively affected by the use of these drugs. Addiction -- to alcohol and tobacco, no less than to cocaine, heroin and Ecstasy -- and its attendant social costs are real problems of which I am acutely aware, having worked in the field for almost 30 years. If we were to choose, however, to put the resources now going into the War on Drugs into family-support programs, education, community building and economic development for the most marginalized in our society (instead of making sure the rich can get richer), we might reduce some of the conditions that lead some people to use mood-altering drugs in destructive ways. Telling people not to use drugs and punishing them for doing it will not change drug-using behavior, It is time-- well past time-- to acknowledge that the War on Drugs is misguided and therefore unwinnable, and that the use of mood-altering drugs is not a threat to civilization. Any more than, as it turned out, were communists. Robert Wilson, Asheville - --- MAP posted-by: Terry F