Pubdate: Sat, 24 Jul 2010 Source: Peoria Journal Star (IL) Copyright: 2010 Greg James Contact: http://pjstar.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/338 Note: Does not publish letters from outside our circulation area. Author: Greg James END DRUG WAR, CURTAIL VIOLENCE ON OUR STREETS Approximately 20 years ago I went to a meeting of the League of Women voters on crime. I went with the solution of ending the prohibition on drugs. The Peoria police chief's solution, among others', was to get tougher on crime. About two years ago there was another meeting on crime at the Lariat Steakhouse with all of the powers that be. I had to interrupt the meeting in the end to even speak. We got the same get-tough-on-crime rhetoric, and look what we have. Fast forward to today, and there are more murders than ever, with innocent people in the crossfire. We are all at risk and unsafe. Just driving through the wrong end of town might get you shot! Turn the pages of daily newspapers and read the stories about the very ugly change in Mexico's drug war. Get tougher? Is this where we are headed? In a real drug war in Mexico, heads roll across dance room floors, bodies dangle from bridges, there are car bombs. Officials and police are killed frequently. Businesses close early to avoid the gangs who threaten them. Ambulance drivers and emergency room doctors come under fire from gang members trying to finish off wounded rivals. In our city people already avoid opening businesses and are constantly at risk of being robbed and killed just doing business. The police who beg for more police, and the newspaper that gets to print all of the sensationalism, are the profiteers of prohibition. If prohibition were to end, maybe the Journal Star would have more advertisers, not shootouts over turf, and maybe people would no longer avoid Peoria. Again, prohibition does not and will not work. If we look to the past we have an exact example of how to solve our crime problem. Why do voters keep calling for the government to do what we know does not work? I am not saying Peoria can end prohibition, but they can start the call and let us all live in peace. I am a person who uses no drugs and believes in both freedom and safety in America. Call your local mayor. Call the governor. Voice your opinion to end prohibition or continue to pay and live in fear! Greg James Mossville - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake