Pubdate: Thu, 18 Jul 2002 Source: Spokesman-Review (WA) Copyright: 2002 The Spokesman-Review Contact: http://www.spokesmanreview.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/417 Author: Robert Sharpe, Jack Satkoski Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v02/n1315/a05.html DRUG POLICY SADLY MISGUIDED Greg Johnson (Letters, July 13) defends the Supreme Court's latest drug war exemption to the Constitution by suggesting that students enrolled in extracurricular activities will look forward to drug tests. Being forced to urinate in front of an adult is not exactly the kind of validation most teenagers seek. Student involvement in extracurricular activities has been shown to reduce drug use. They keep kids busy during the hours they are most likely to get into trouble. Forcing students to undergo degrading urine tests as a prerequisite will only discourage participation in such activities. Drug testing may also compel users of relatively harmless marijuana to switch to harder drugs to avoid testing positive. Despite a short-lived high, marijuana is the only drug that stays in the human body long enough to make urinalysis a deterrent. Marijuana's organic metabolites are fat-soluble and can linger for days. Synthetic drugs like ecstasy, meth, LSD or heroin are water-soluble and exit the body quickly. If you think students don't know this, think again. Anyone capable of running a search on the Internet can find out how to thwart a drug test. Drug testing profiteers do not readily volunteer this information, for obvious reasons. The most commonly abused drug is almost impossible to detect with urinalysis. That drug is alcohol, and it takes far more student lives every year than all illegal drugs combined. Instead of wasting money on counterproductive drug tests, schools should invest in reality-based drug education. Robert Sharpe, M.P.A., Program Officer ----- TIME TO CHANGE WAR ON DRUGS There is something radically wrong with President Bush's wet noodle speeches dealing with continual corporate fraud. The war on people who use or deal in certain drugs not approved by the state, called the "war on drugs," face mandatory minimum sentences, property forfeiture, and even the death sentence. All this even though the activity is consensual. Since Nixon's time the war on drugs has cost the American taxpayer nearly $200 billion dollars. Another $20 billion is being spent this year. Now, in corporate crime, thousands of employees are ruined through loss of retirement and employment while CEOs, etc. make off with millions. Doubling the sentence of laws with no teeth amounts to no change. It is time for taxpayers to demand that our government stops acting like a clown. Lawmakers need to make a distinction between areas where people are really hurt and need protection from emotional charged trivia. Jack Satkoski, Sandpoint - --- MAP posted-by: Ariel