Pubdate: Sat, 10 Feb 2001 Source: San Jose Mercury News (CA) Copyright: 2001 San Jose Mercury News Contact: 750 Ridder Park Drive, San Jose, CA 95190 Fax: (408) 271-3792 Website: http://www.sjmercury.com/ Forum: http://forums.bayarea.com/webx/cgi-bin/WebX Author: Joseph D. McNamara, Frank Williams, Silvio Levy FIGHT THE 'DRUG WAR FALLACY' Your editorial "Drug war fallacy" (Opinion, Feb. 6) commendably criticizes emphasizing drug law enforcement over treatment. However, you contribute to establishing bad public policy when you suggest that children can be "immunized" from abuse of alcohol, tobacco and other drug addiction. Certainly, parents and society should seek to keep kids from getting into trouble with these substances, but there is no magic formula or immunization to do so. Furthermore, you quote Joseph Califano Jr.'s preposterous statement that, "We know that a child who gets through age 21 without smoking, abusing alcohol or using illegal drugs is virtually certain never to do so." No responsible student of human behavior would agree with such an extreme view. It is an invitation to oversimplify the drug problem and to embrace cruel punishments. In the end, we should recognize that people, young or old, should not be put in jail solely because they use certain chemicals. Nor should robbers, burglars and other criminals be excused from punishment because they use drugs. We can reason with drug users and give them accurate information on the effects of all drugs, including the many mind-altering substances that are legal, but if they still make foolish choices, it is better for them and society that they pursue therapy rather than be incarcerated and forced to live with the stigma of a criminal conviction. Neither Al Gore nor George W. Bush would have succeeded if they had been convicted of their "young and foolish" behavior under today's Draconian laws. Treatment is not a panacea, but it is compassionate and vastly superior to the racism, violence, corruption, and failure inherent in a criminal justice war against drugs. Joseph D. McNamara, Research fellow Hoover Institution, Stanford University ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~` Most people believe that illegal drugs are evil and that the people who use them are evil. (I have not been able to figure out whether it is the drugs that cause people to be evil or if it is people who are evil and thus use illegal drugs; it's kind of all mixed up.) However, these same "illegal drugs are evil" people will accept that legal drugs with the same abuse potential are OK and not evil. We happily give Ritalin (an amphetamine) to our children; we watch our children and young adults use another amphetamine, Ecstasy, at raves; we claim to drink our wine only for health reasons and because it has "bouquet," although we know the real reason is to alter our minds; we quaff our Budweiser so that we can get the girls. None of this is immoral. I agree with almost all of your editorial, but I do not believe that anything will be done in this country for a long time, if ever, to change our present approach of prison time for poor people. Frank Williams Palo Alto ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~` Thanks for your editorial "Drug war fallacy." I hope the report on drug use cited in the editorial is heeded. And although the report does not stress it, it's important to say that the criminal approach to the drug problem is not just ineffective; it also causes violence and corrupts law enforcement. It is used to justify discrimination, the erosion of individual liberties, and the creation of misery abroad. In Colombia our tax money is being used to starve peasants by destroying subsistence crops -- legal and illegal alike -- and to prop up a corrupt and violent army. Silvio Levy Berkeley - --- MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager