Pubdate: Wed, 31 Mar 1999 Date: 03/31/1999 Source: Wall Street Journal (NY) Author: Mark Honts Section: Editorial Page Note: referenced OPED http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v99.n347.a07.html * Some ideas are like the fictional Jason, who inspired "Friday the 13" and multiple sequels: they simply cannot be killed. Clearly, the "gateway" canard, invented by Harry Anslinger and defended by Joe Califano, falls into that category. Anslinger was nothing if not inventive; the effects of cannabis were so universally unknown in the mid-1930s that he was able to claim (successfully) that it provokes casual users to murderous rage. Nowadays, thanks to the success of the criminal market he campaigned for, that idea would be hooted off the stage. Gateway and numerous sons of gateway have proven far more durable than "reefer madness," probably because there is a strong correlation (acknowledged in the IOM report) between use of tobacco, alcohol, cannabis and other drugs. This is the obverse of Mr. Califano's other nugget: people who haven't used any drugs at all by age 21 are unlikely to do so. Perhaps the most reasonable interpretation of his tortured "data" is that some people are much more likely to use drugs than others, a tendency usually expressed during their teen years. Unfortunately for Mr. Califano's purposes, that interpretation could hardly justify arresting 700,000 people a year in a futile attempt to shut one gateway while allowing two others to gape invitingly. Mark Honts Fort Worth, Texas