Pubdate: Mon, 22 Nov 1999 Date: 11/22/1999 Source: Nation, The (US) Author: Chris Ford Related: All the special issue articles are linked at: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v99/n963/a03.html I disagree strongly with Michael Massing's call to maintain drug prohibition. "Decriminalizing" drugs is not the answer. The problem with substances being just a little bit illegal is that it's too easy for an opportunistic politician to make them a little bit more illegal. Example: Possession of less than an ounce of pot has been decriminalized in California since 1976, but in the mid-nineties Governor Pete Wilson ushered in legislation that suspends for six months the driver's license of anyone caught with any amount of marijuana - even when the possession had nothing to do with driving, As long as a drug is against the law, there is potential for ill-conceived punishments related to its possession and use. Massing also misreads drug-war politics. The drumbeat to end drug prohibition is growing, and I predict that at least marijuana will be legal in California and/or other Western states in five to ten years. Six Western states have already approved "medical" use of marijuana, and a group in Washington State attempted to place a real marijuana-legalization measure on the November 2000 ballot. Chris Ford Los Angeles