Pubdate: Thu, 08 Jan 2004 Source: Creative Loafing Atlanta (GA) Copyright: 2004, Creative Loafing Contact: http://www.atlanta.creativeloafing.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1507 Author: Kirk Muse, http://www.mapinc.org/writers/Kirk+Muse Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v03/n1853/a01.html HIGH VALUES Bob Barr: I'm writing about your thoughtful column in Creative Loafing Atlanta ("Pre-emptive strike hits high schools," Nov. 20). Like you, when I saw the video of the police raiding, with guns drawn and pointed at high school students at Stafford High School in Goose Creek, S.C., I was deeply disturbed and upset. I am deeply disturbed and upset because, as I see it, our war on drugs has transformed the former "Land of Liberty" into a police state. Like you, I am very concerned with the loss of our personal privacy. Like you, I am very concerned with the potential for abuse of our personal freedom and personal privacy by the so-called "Patriot Act." Like you, personal freedom and personal privacy are very high values for me and my family. Unlike you, I believe Rush Limbaugh or any other adult citizen should be free to smoke, swallow, snort or inject any substance they want into their own bodies. Especially in the privacy of their own home, as long as they are personally responsible for the consequences. Unlike you, I believe adult citizens should be free to alter their own minds in any way they please in the privacy of their own homes. Many things and substances alter minds -- books, movies, good music (and bad music) schools, coffee, tobacco, food and yes, recreational drugs. Almost all the problems we have with recreational drugs are because the drugs are illegal. Because the drugs are illegal, they are of unknown quality, unknown purity and unknown potency. Because drugs are illegal, they are untaxed, unregulated and controlled by criminal gangs -- just like alcohol was when it was illegal. In 1969, the federal drug enforcement budget was $65 million. Last year it was $19.2 billion (these figures don't include the cost of incarceration or the state and local costs). The $19.2 billion is greater than a 295-fold increase. In 1969 coffee sold for 25 cents a cup. If the price of coffee had risen at the same rate as our drug enforcement budget, we would now be paying almost $75 for a cup of coffee. It seems to me that "true conservatives" would oppose wasteful counter-productive policies. Why don't you oppose these wasteful counter-productive policies of drug criminalization? Kirk Muse, Mesa, Ariz. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake