Pubdate: Wed, 14 Apr 1999 Source: Canberra Times (Australia) Contact: http://www.canberratimes.com.au/ Author: Peter Watney HISTORY SHOWS DRUG BANS ARE USELESS PETER TRICKETT (Letters, 11 April) takes Geoff Page ("The great sidestep on heroin", CT, 7 April, p.9) to task for arguing "that highly addictive and dangerous drugs of abuse such as heroin and cocaine should be put on the same legal footing as tobacco and alcohol . . ." After a disastrous 14-year attempt to ban alcohol, the Federal Government of the USA permitted local government to regulate the manufacture and sale of alcohol. Organised crime got out of the alcohol trade, and the warfare on the streets was greatly reduced. The public was again able to know the quality of alcoholic beverages purchased. It did not consume more than it had during prohibition, although prohibition had encouraged the consumption of hard liquor over drinks like beer and wine. The USA and Australia have pursued the hard line on illicit drugs, and each country has experienced a steadily increasing consumption of hard drugs by an ever-younger cross-section of its population. PETER WATNEY Holt - --- MAP posted-by: Patrick Henry