Pubdate: 7 Jan 1999 Source: Minneapolis Star-Tribune (MN) Contact: http://www.startribune.com/stonline/html/userguide/letform.html Website: http://www.startribune.com/ Forum: http://talk.startribune.com/cgi-bin/WebX.cgi Copyright: 1999 Star Tribune Author: Paul Bischke DOING TIME Jeff Goodman [Commentary, Dec. 30] chillingly described ''what a prison sentence really means.'' As a proponent of drug reform, I hear regularly of nonviolent offenders imprisoned under brutal circumstances for longer sentences than killers and rapists because they've run afoul of the nation's arbitrary drug abstinence code. This severity is meant to make citizens invulnerable to drug-abuse related problems by making America ''drug free.'' But the punishments against abstinence violators are wildly disproportionate to the tangible harm that is or even could be caused by drug use. Therefore, this severity is unjust. In ''Escape from Evil'' (1975, Free Press) Pulitzer-Prize winning social critic Ernest Becker explained how a society's effort to make itself radically invulnerable to some evil threat, real or imagined, can lead that society to perpetrate far greater evils while defending itself. This was the pattern in the Spanish Inquisition, the Salem witch-burnings, the Holocaust and in Jim Crow Dixieland. The same pattern holds true for modern America's treatment of drug-abstinence violators. The evils promulgated in apprehending and punishing nonabstainers far exceed the evils of drug abuse. To assure yourself that Goodman's prison experience is not some rare exception, read the book ''Shattered Lives: Portraits from America's Drug War'' by Conrad, Resner and Norris (1998, Creative Xpressions) or visit the November Coalition Web site that's meant to help families destroyed by the antidrug pogrom (www.november.org). - -- Paul M. Bischke, St. Paul. - --- MAP posted-by: Rich O'Grady