Pubdate: Sat, 22 Mar 2003 Source: Bradenton Herald (FL) Copyright: 2003 Bradenton Herald Contact: http://www.bradenton.com/mld/bradentonherald/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/58 Author: John Chase ASSESS DRUG RISKS Brenda Katz's guest column of March 10 illustrates the basic problem with the debate on drug legalization. She argues that drugs are bad, therefore "legalization" is not indicated. But she does not define "legalization," preferring instead to leave it to the imagination. A more honest debate would presume that some drugs, whether legal or illegal, carry great risk for some people in some circumstances. Then debate the most effective way to manage that risk. Recent experience with tobacco and alcohol has demonstrated that an unfettered free market is worse than today's rules for education, labeling and against advertising. Conversely, history shows that prohibition of these two drugs is worse than an unfettered free market. Even summary amputations and executions failed to stamp out tobacco in the Old World in the centuries following its discovery in the New World. More recently, our "noble experiment" to stamp out alcohol in the 1920s ended when it became apparent that prohibition enforcement caused more societal damage than it prevented. This experience suggests that there is an optimum level of regulation to achieve minimum societal damage, probably neither an unfettered free market nor prohibition. Each debater should argue for his/her chosen level on its own merits, not against the demerits of the level he/she believes his/her opponent holds, regardless how fervently he/she believes it. John Chase, Palm Harbor - --- MAP posted-by: Tom