Pubdate: Thu, 27 Jul 2000 Source: Chicago Sun-Times (IL) Copyright: 2000 The Sun-Times Co. Contact: 401 N. Wabash, Chicago IL 60611 Feedback: http://www.suntimes.com/geninfo/feedback.html Website: http://www.suntimes.com/ Author: James E. Gierach Related: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v00/n1049/a04.html LEADERS AFRAID TO DISCUSS LEGALIZING DRUGS The recent murders of 12-year-old innocents Tsarina Powell, Miguel DeLaRosa and a dozen or so others have prompted action. On July 22, Mayor Daley and U.S. Rep. Bobby Rush (D-Ill.) were on hand to lead citizens in anti-violence activities. Daley led a CAPS march through a Northwest Side neighborhood, and Rush convened a South Side meeting of more than 600 leaders who brainstormed for solutions to stop the gun violence. The march and summit made points that apparently didn't score with some gang-bangers, for by the next day, a drive-by shooting left four more youngsters shot. So much for another march against drugs, gangs and guns. And so much for another summit, like the 1993 Stop-the-Killing Summit sponsored by then-Ald. Robert Shaw and his brother state Sen. William Shaw, that didn't let an "end-the-drug-war" word in edgewise. I was baited into attending Rush's emergency leadership summit at Chicago State University. Days before the summit, Rush said that decriminalization of drugs was one idea that would be discussed at the summit. Rush also evidenced insight into one major cause of gun violence when he plainly said, "It's a turf battle over drugs." He also said, "I believe that somehow we've got to look at, at least have a discussion about . . . how do we take the profit out of drug use?" I was hooked by those hopeful words. But sometime before the summit Rush stopped whistling his hopeful tune. From 10 a.m. to 3:30 p.m., I waited for Rush to broach the promised subject or to invite another to raise it. Disappointingly, the discussion of drug policy reform to stop the gun violence never came and hope was gone. The words "decriminalize drugs" and "take the profit out of drug use" and "turf battle over drugs" never crossed Rush's lips. Instead, the summit broke into 20 smaller discussion groups--all simultaneously brainstorming and shouting to be heard in the same room. Several groups listed drugs as a cause of gun violence and, at my suggestion, "the war on drugs" also was listed. However, when I suggested "an end to the drug war" as an action that if taken would help stop the killing and maiming through gun violence (Focus Question No. 2), the group monitor reported the suggestion as a need for "more drug treatment." So what action will stop the gun violence, according to summit leaders and Daley-led marchers? Anything and everything but a change in prohibition drug policy: jobs, education, mentoring, talking to your kids, "responding as a whole community" and all the other old, tried and failed, politically safe remedies. Cannot we nip turf war-driven gun violence by committing massive economic resources to the drug fight? No, a $1.3 billion gift to Colombia and a prayer will not change the barbarous nature of prohibition machinations. Nor will a $20-billion-a-year drug-war fix quiet gang tensions or suppress gang greed, rivalry and contagion. Cannot we protect children from gang gunfire while they sleep in their beds and ride bikes in their 'hood by hiring 1,000 Chicago-based parole agents to supervise the old rascals, and paring juvenile protections to subdue the new rascals? Cannot the rapid-fire implementation of another draft of Daley's anti-loitering ordinance dissuade these gang-banging suspects from the pursuit of crime and drug profits? Maybe trigger locks or lawsuits against gun manufacturers? Or gun dealer prosecutions to deter their indirect sharing in drug-prohibition revenues by selling firearms to gangster intermediaries? How about motor-vehicle impoundment for vehicle owners inflicted upon an unsuspecting public in Room 110 of Chicago's "Drug-War Forfeiture Center" at 400 W. Superior? These remedies cannot succeed. Even the successful implementation of all summit suggestions to stop the killing and maiming, without drug policy change cannot succeed. Actually, as the Rush summiteers demonstrated, leaders are willing to do just about anything to stop the gun violence that's killing kids--anything but decriminalize drugs, legalize drugs, take the profit out of the illicit-drug business or end the drug war. James E. Gierach, Oak Lawn - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens