Pubdate: Tue, 28 Jul 1998 Date: 07/28/1998 Source: Irish Independent (UK) Author: Martin Cooke Website: http://www.independent.ie/ Sir, As reports come in that the country's problem with heroin and other dangerous drugs is beginning to be felt in provincial towns and rural villages ('Shooting up in rural Ireland', "Focus"), one must wonder just what can be done to stop our young people from starting to use these dangerous substances. Earlier this month in the United States, the Office of National Drug Control Policy announced a $2 billion anti-drug media campaign. At the ceremony heralding its launch in Atlanta, President Clinton told students, "These ads are designed to knock America upside its head and get America's attention." Meanwhile in Britain, the Home Office spend on anti-drug education has just been increased by UKP188 million in a much-trumpeted strategy to educate schoolchildren as young as five years of age on the dangers of drugs. Whilst such strategies may make parents feel that at least their governments are doing something to tackle the problem, they are likely to cause more harm than good in the long run, if only because of the natural tendency of young people to ignore or even actively oppose the threats and moralising of their parents' generation. But the very fact that we should even need to consider committing such vast sums of public money raises a larger and far more important question: Just why are these dangerous substances so far outside the control of responsible society that we cannot keep them out of the hands of our children? The answer is that drug prohibition has failed our children, and failed them spectacularly. Drug prohibition, far from being a form of drug control, is nothing more than the surrendering of the control of these dangerous and addictive substances into the hands of criminals. These so-called "Controlled Substances" are, in reality, completely outside any form of control whatsoever. The whole root of the problem lies in the very fact that these drugs are illegal in the first place. This very illegality gives them a value far above their true cost. Indeed they have become so valuable that, as we have seen in Ireland time and time again over the past twenty years or so, all attempts to incarcerate the criminals involved in their distribution only result in other greedy individuals stepping in to fill the void that is created. Prohibitionists often speak of the 'horrifying' prospect of legalisation, including "heroin being sold in the corner shop to children with false identities". But when was the last time that a child in this country, attempting to buy heroin, was asked for identification, false or otherwise, under the present system? Indeed children are advantageous customers to the pushers, as they are very unlikely to be either undercover gardai or informers. Prohibition does not work. Prohibition never has worked. Prohibition never will work. And until the world wakes up to this fact we will continue to see the lives of more and more of our children destroyed by its effects. Yours, Martin Cooke