Pubdate: Sun, 08 Mar 2009 Source: Tribune Review (Pittsburgh, PA) Copyright: 2009 Tribune-Review Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.pittsburghlive.com/x/pittsburghtrib/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/460 Author: Alan Schultz DRUG WAR SOLUTION? Given that the major casualty in our war on drugs is and has been the civil rights of Americans, this war should never have been started. Having been unfortunately started, it should long since have been stopped. However, bureaucratic empires built around the war on drugs have made stopping it difficult, perhaps impossible. Legitimate efforts to cease this foolishness should continue. As to Mexico's problems spilling over into the United States, Mexican criminals should be sent back to their own country. There is no requirement for the United States to send them back with their shoes shined and their trousers pressed, however. On other aspects of this situation, Mexico has problems with the corruption of some of its officials. Same thing happens here, in case you haven't noticed. Unfortunately, the customers for illegal drugs, should those drugs continue to be illegal, are a separate question and are in the United States -- a situation that our government seemingly has failed to address for too many years, which has brought us to the point we now find ourselves in. By the way, a possible solution to this "spillover" of Mexican-based criminal activity and violence into this country, as mentioned in a Trib editorial (""Mexico's drug violence: U.S. in the cross hairs," March 3 and PghTrib.com), might be the following: Rather than interfering with American citizens' right and ability to protect themselves, the government should arm those who wish to be armed for their own protection, for government obviously is not up to the task and never has been. The individual's personal protection is, has been and remains the individual's responsibility. About this, government talks a good game. Unfortunately, it doesn't play a good game. Alan Schultz McCandless - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin