Pubdate: Sat, 19 Jun 2010 Source: Ottawa Citizen (CN ON) Copyright: 2010 Russell Barth Contact: http://www.canada.com/ottawacitizen/letters.html Website: http://www.canada.com/ottawacitizen/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/326 Author: Russell Barth Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v10/n462/a07.html GIVING ADDICTS PHARMACEUTICALS REDUCES CRIME Re: Paying panhandlers feeds the drug problem on Ottawa's streets, community group told, June 17. Although I am in favour of not giving a single penny to panhandlers, I am sick and tired of our governments at all levels implementing the same failed policies which caused the problems in the first place. Police chief Vern White said, "There's not a 14-or 15year-old ( in Ottawa) who can't buy drugs. I have yet to see a school that doesn't have drug dealers." This has been around for decades and is a direct result of prohibition. The problem is that we only gave the police a hammer as a tool so, to them, every problem is treated like a nail. We need to stop listening to only the police officials' assertions, and critically examine the evidence and history available on the subject of drug policy. Once we do that, we will quickly realize that by legalizing and regulating these drugs - like we do with far more dangerous and deadly things like alcohol and tobacco and junk food - we can mitigate most of these problems. If we gave every addict in the city clean, pharmaceutical versions of the drugs they are addicted to - like we do now with methadone - they would not have to do crimes so they could get money to buy poison off of some creepy dealer. Legalize crack, you ask? No. We are talking about pharmaceutical cocaine, heroin, methamphetamine, and substitute medications. Which, when administered by a clinic nurse or taken at home as a prescription, are about as safe as any other pharmaceutical on the market. This policy would get users off the pipe, away from needles, away from the street adulterations, doing fewer crimes, and right there every day getting a warm look from a nurse. Evidence shows that this system will bring them steps closer to sobriety. We also need to break our thinking that drug use is somehow more bad or immoral than anything else that people do. Drugs are just substances, and they possess no magical powers. Our ridiculous, outrageously counterproductive drug laws are the problem. But we almost never hear police admit that. Russell Barth, Nepean Educators for Sensible Drug Policy - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake