Pubdate: Wed, 02 Aug 2000 Source: Bangkok Post (Thailand) Copyright: The Post Publishing Public Co., Ltd. 2000 Contact: http://www.bangkokpost.co.th/ Author: Jake Catlett OLD WAYS OF FIGHTING HEROIN DON'T WORK In regards to the editorial in the July 31 Post titled "Taleban deserves benefit of the doubt", I would like to make a couple of comments. While I in no way condone the production and export of heroin and other opium products, I want to point out that the idea that the ramping down of the production and export of heroin would save money and effort from countries like the United States is ridiculous. Along the east coast in cities like New York, Philadelphia and Boston, the use of laboratory-produced synthetic heroin is already the norm. The number of people addicted to synthetic heroin in America is far greater than the number addicted to brown heroin, the type extracted from opium. The notion that people who are addicted to naturally derived heroin will move on to an alternative if the market dries up is correct-they will turn to synthetic heroin, which is cheaper to produce and much, much stronger than its organic cousin. The end result will be that people who lose their current supply of naturally occurring heroin will wind up addicted to a much harsher and much more addictive substance. Fentanyl compounds (synthetic opiates) are extremely harsh on the system and cause a much worse addiction than organic heroin and cause side-effects that are markedly more disturbing. People need to stop thinking about what people and countries should be punished for producing heroin, and they should start thinking about alternatives to keep people from becoming addicted. In Denmark heroin addicts now declare themselves addicted to the government, and the government supplies them with their daily dose. This stops the users from committing crimes to support their habits, gives them the opportunity to reclaim their lives as citizens, and gives people a much more open and honest view of these people's conditions and lives. Much more importantly than that, it dries up the demand for black market heroin. People who are given measured doses under medical supervision and without charge do not need to sell drugs to support their habit, and have none to spare to turn on new users. The end result-a result which is factual and available for all to see-is that Denmark has consistently observed dropping rates of addiction, and the evaporation of heroin-related crime. The warlords, tyrants and cartel leaders who base their financial futures on the heroin trade will be forced out of the business for a simple reason-dropping addiction rates and a dissolving demand in the foreign market. If these measures had been followed years ago, the druglords in Asia and in South America would have no money left today to enact their terror tactics and policies of horror. Jake Catlett, San Francisco - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart