Pubdate: Sun, 03 Apr 2005 Source: Winnipeg Sun (CN MB) Copyright: 2005 Canoe Limited Partnership Contact: http://www.winnipegsun.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/503 Author: Clifford Schaffer Note: Parenthetical remark by the Sun editor. Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v05.n523.a11.html PROHIBITION GREATER EVIL Rev. Harry Lehotsky (The pros and cons of legalizing drugs, March 27) is so misinformed that he is just funny -- or he would be if the lawmakers weren't just as ill-informed. The only people I have ever heard say that legalization will solve all the problems of drugs are prohibitionists trying to set up a straw man argument. Legalization would not eliminate all the problems, just as it didn't eliminate all the problems of alcohol. But it did greatly reduce the problems of Prohibition. Alcohol Prohibition went into effect in the U.S. in 1920. It was passed with a campaign of "Save the Children from Alcohol" and the prohibition laws were a response to a real social problem with alcohol. Within five years, homicide rates skyrocketed. Arrests for public drunkenness were 30% above the pre-Prohibition records. Home breweries -- just like today's grow-ops -- were rampant. In some cases whole neighbourhoods went in on a cooperative basis to make booze. Police corruption was so rampant that they shipped corrupt cops off to prison literally by the trainload. Organized crime thrived. Even worse was the effect on children. Teen admissions to hospitals for alcohol problems soared. Teen arrests for public drunkenness set new records. Schools had to cancel dances because so many kids showed up drunk. The average age at which people started drinking dropped three years in the first five years of prohibition. Kids became involved in the bootlegging trade. Some early supporters of prohibition turned against it because they said Prohibition made it easier than ever for their kids to get alcohol. Prohibition was repealed in 1933 with a campaign of "Save the Children from Prohibition." In contrast, the currently illegal drugs were not passed in response to any real social problem. There was a time when they were all legal and available over the counter, even to kids. Cocaine was included in soda pop, toothache drops, and tobacco cheroots. Morphine was a common part of patent medicines and heroin was included in some baby colic remedies. Extracts of marijuana were included in about 250 common medicines and cannabis was grown and used by everyone from George Washington and Thomas Jefferson to middle class women seeking relief from "women's complaint." Even under those extreme conditions we didn't have the problems we have today. There weren't any major organizations campaigning for their prohibition, as there was with alcohol. Addiction rates were about the same as they are today, but addicts were not criminals, and most of them lived fairly normal, productive lives -- not unlike tobacco addicts today. As a demonstration that addiction need not lead to a life of waste, Dr. William Halsted, the "father of modern surgery," invented most of the basic techniques of modern surgery while he was a morphine addict. Drug-related crime and violence -- except for alcohol -- was virtually unknown. Most of the problems we have today started when these drugs were outlawed. Users became criminals and organized crime found an absolute bonanza. Within 10 years after these drugs were outlawed in the U.S., medical societies across the nation were decrying the prohibition as a medical and social disaster. Of all the ways that we could possibly approach this problem, prohibition is the most expensive, causes the most problems, and produces the poorest results. Clifford Schaffer DRCNet Online Library of Drug Policy Agua Dulce, Calif. (Your government's opposition is one of the top reasons cited for retaining prohibition in Canada.) - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin