Pubdate: Tue, 20 May 2014 Source: Florida Today (Melbourne, FL) Copyright: 2014 Francis J. Clifford Contact: http://www.floridatoday.com/content/forms/services/letters.shtml Website: http://www.floridatoday.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/532 Author: Francis J. Clifford MAKING A CASE FOR LEGALIZING SOME DRUGS I want to comment on the young, articulate, writer of the recent letter, "Medical pot OK, but don't legalize it for all." The reality is that kids and adults get and will continue to get and smoke recreational pot, whether or not it is illegal. No method or law has stopped it or will stop it. My son is a recovering drug addict (heroin and cocaine) in another state who now works with other addicts at the place that helped him to recover. He started his addiction with pot in high school. He now advocates for the open, regulated sale of pot, heroin and cocaine. What most of us don't see, but addicts/buyers do, is the tremendous trafficking, the inner-city wastelands due largely to drug sales and the billions in cash being made by suppliers, from the streets to the kingpins. More importantly than local, state and federal governments realizing massive income, my son is convinced the entire industry would be reduced to virtually nothing if these substances were legalized. Taxpayer dollars saved in the criminal justice system alone would be enough to be redirected to fighting other crimes, including tax evasion and other financial fraud that hurt millions of innocent citizens. His point is the same as that of pot - users get it now and will continue to get it. Our elected representatives seem to be afraid to try something, see how it works and change or even scrap it after a trial period. Keeping these substances under the wraps of law has gotten us nowhere. Francis J. Clifford, Melbourne - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D