Pubdate: Thu, 14 Dec 2006 Source: Times Argus (Barre, VT) Copyright: 2006 Times Argus Contact: http://www.timesargus.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/893 Author: R. E. Lewis A NEW APPROACH FOR DRUG WAR Thank you to State's Attorney Sands for encouraging dialogue about our futile drug "war." Certainly most drugs are harmful, but it's illogical to add more harm and pretend it's fixing the problem. Let's try harm reduction. Decades of harm enhancement policies have exacerbated the problems. We have overcrowded jails disenfranchising people from society. We arrest dealers but addicts find, and/or become, new dealers. Jail is renowned for making drug connections and only works if nobody is released. Our amoral drug war creates more problems than it fixes. We have more drug-related violence by criminals (Saunders murder, the kidnapping near Rutland etc.), and police (the groom, the 88-year-old grandmother etc.). More broken families. More people hate police. Fewer people are being protected. Legalization is not the answer, though. Tobacco industry abuses illustrate that. Harm reduction as a new paradigm can address each drug's unique dynamics. E.g., marijuana is consumed by a complete cross section of society with illegality being its only true danger. The "gateway" drug argument is nonsensical. Decriminalize it and focus on dangerous drugs. Reduce the criminal element from at least some hard drugs by supplying them to addicts and reducing their need to sell drugs to get drugs. Most addicts didn't think they'd get hooked. Fewer drugs on the street means fewer people experimenting and getting addicted. Treat hard drugs as a health crisis. Counteracting drugs and effective outpatient therapies could be developed to alleviate addictions. Most drug users are unhappy with their addictions but help is seldom affordable. Law enforcement is showered with drug funding that should be spent on more civilized drug abatement programs. Law enforcement must still play a supporting role. The "get tough" mantra seems played out. Right or wrong? Who knows. Offer your ideas and get the dialogue going. R. E. Lewis Northfield - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom