Pubdate: Fri, 10 Aug 2007 Source: Vancouver Courier (CN BC) Copyright: 2007 Vancouver Courier Contact: http://www.vancourier.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/474 Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v07/n914/a09.html?74871 Author: Bruce Symington DRUG CRACKDOWNS INCREASE THEFT To the editor: Re: "Takedown," New Brief, July 27. Reading the item regarding drug dealer arrests I was struck by a quote attributed to the police: "It's alarming when a typical drug addict might have a $250 a day drug habit. He only gets 10 cents on the dollar for the property that he steals, which means he has to steal at least $2,500 a day to feed his habit." What is interesting is this: the police want to blame the drugs for the high level of theft due to junkies stealing to buy said drugs, when the reality is that it is entirely due to the actions of the police that the price of drugs is so high. In the next paragraph, the call goes out for the police to get even tougher on drug dealers. Their justification? They want to reduce theft. While this is an admirable goal, the approach taken will have exactly the opposite result; it will drive up the price of drugs, thereby increasing theft. When the police are "successful" and arrest the dealers, the remaining dealers are able to raise their price. Now, the junkie needs $300 per day to pay for his drugs, which leads to $3,000 per day in theft, using the police's own formula. This increases theft by about 20 per cent. How is this improving the situation? How will it lead to less theft when the laws of economics dictate a different result? The results will inevitably be that the theft level will go up as the price of drugs increases. This will lead to another press conference next year calling for an additional ramping up of the war on some drugs. And so the snowball rolls. What I don't understand is how such pretzel logic went unchallenged by your reporter. This is another example of how the media lets the readers down by not really examining what is said, but just reporting distortions and lies as if they were truth. Bruce Symington, Medicine Hat, Alberta - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom