Pubdate: Wed, 01 Jan 2003 Source: Herald-Sun, The (Durham, NC) Copyright: 2003 The Herald-Sun Contact: http://www.herald-sun.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1428 Author: Martin Eagle OTHER COSTS OF DRUG WAR Two recent programs on National Public Radio talked about prison overcrowding and the trend toward early release of felons as a way to deal with it. During much debate, no one mentioned the solution to this and a host of other social and economic problems: Legalize drugs. All of them - not just the ones we currently wink at, such as marijuana, but even the big boys, heroin and cocaine. Before the hue and cry of moral outrage, let me point out a few things. n Drugs are not a moral issue. They are medical and/or political issues. - -If you add up the total cost in death, illness, lost productivity attributed to illegal drugs, that figure is a minuscule portion of the cost of our legal intoxicants, alcohol and tobacco. On the other hand, if you look at the law enforcement costs, 90 percent of law enforcement money goes to drug crime. - -The only people who benefit from prohibition are drug criminals and their counterparts in drug law enforcement. Take away the crime and you take away the profit motive along with all its violence and corruption. Most street cops, who do all the work, agree. This I can attest to as the first police psychologist in North Carolina and as someone who has had considerable contact with personnel in a variety of law enforcement agencies. Without drug crime, law enforcement can deal with serious criminals, not just those who commit crimes to finance the purchase of substances whose price is inflated by prohibition, or engage in violence over "turf." Jails will be emptied of dealers and users, who now comprise the bulk of prison populations. Drug cartels will have no money to corrupt governments or their agencies, and no reason to commit the wholesale slaughter they now engage in. All the money thus released can go toward social needs now being fiscally starved, including treatment for addicts who wish to stop. We might even be able to save Social Security and pay the unemployment benefits for all those ex-DEA agents. MARTIN EAGLE, Bahama, January 1, 2003 - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake