Pubdate: Thu, 08 Mar 2007 Source: Stowe Reporter, The (VT) Copyright: 2007 The Stowe Reporter Contact: http://www.stowereporter.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2426 Author: Fred Chase DRUG WAR'S FUTILITY IS LIKE PROHIBITION To the Editor: Scott Monroe reports on more drug convictions in the March 1 issue of the Stowe Reporter. We have been at this drug war for 36 years and we are no closer to winning it than we were 36 years ago. Richard Nixon declared his "War on Drugs" in 1971. This is a government program that generates huge prices and huge profits because the drugs are illegal. For risk-takers with an entrepreneurial spirit and limited opportunities, this government program is made for them. They are willing to take the risk of going to prison for profits that the pharmaceutical companies can only dream about. Does anyone believe that there won't be other risk-takers taking the places of those apprehended in Stowe and Morrisville in a week? A month? Six months? The profits are too great. Maybe it's time for a change of direction. Maybe it is time to puncture the balloon that generates these huge profits. In the 1930s, the citizens and the politicians came to the conclusion that the war against alcohol - that is, Prohibition - did more harm than did the drug alcohol. Al Capone and others got rich during Prohibition. Organized crime came into its own and went on to flourish. So the citizens and the politicians repealed Prohibition. From the standpoint of total damage done from addiction to alcohol in the USA compared to the damage stemming from marijuana, say, it is hardly a blip (except, of course, the damages stemming from the drug war itself). Even more to the point, the drug war has not ended the availability of illegal drugs. Those who want these drugs get these drugs if they can pay the price, even committing armed robbery to do so, as Vermonters have learned. Maybe it's time for a change of direction. Fred Chase, Stowe - --- MAP posted-by: Derek