Pubdate: Sun, 25 Aug 2002 Source: Star, The (IL) Copyright: 2000 The Sun-Times Co. Contact: http://www.starnewspapers.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1052 Note: The Star prints 23 local editions in Illinois Author: James E. Gierach IT DAWNS ON HIM: SOMETIMES THE DRUG WAR DOES DO GOOD "Cocaine mother lode seized" a recent headline proclaimed, buttressed with a photo of the two-ton cocaine seizure. This quarter-of-a-billion-dollar drug bust was sizable enough to pay a quarter of a day's federal deficit for the nation during Ross Perot's first campaign for U.S. president. That's some serious cash money - which brings me to today's drug-war lesson: The drug war does do some good. No, as evidenced by the repeated seizures of drugs by the ton, drug war does not stop the flow of drugs and it causes turf-war violence. But drug war does feed the poor and it does redistribute the wealth - from rich countries and communities to poor countries and communities. Ironically on the same day that the Chicago area cocaine story broke it was reported that "Rich '90s failed to lift all: Income disparity between races widened greatly, census analysis shows." The story was complete with tables, color graphics and a photo of a young man pushing a shopping cart loaded with junk down a Chicago South Side Oakland neighborhood street. On the brighter side, the drug business, made possible by drug prohibition laws, is the principal antidote to the economic destitution experienced by people of color on Chicago's south and west sides and in poor communities everywhere. The drug war is the hand that feeds the poor with drug profits like manna from heaven, while the same hand - too often - kills them. (That was the message of my Bud Billiken Day float entry in 2001, a message the Chicago press chose not to publicize.) Drug war gives, but it also takes away. It gives sustenance to families, but often it takes child from parent - by prison, by violence, by gang and by addiction. Why have not the nation's strongest African-Americanand Hispanic leaders, some in Chicago, led the cause for an end to drug war that disparately incarcerates African-American and Hispanic people, that encourages heavy-handed policing, that erodes civil liberties, that transforms neighborhoods into war zones that corrupt police and children alike? Paraphrasing: "It's the money, stupid." The revelation that drug war does do some good was powerfully driven home for me while I was campaigning for Cook County state's attorney in 1992. I was collecting nominating petition signatures in front of a Walgreen's on Chicago's South Side. I shook hands and would say, "Hi, I'm Jim Gierach. I'm running for state's attorney to stop the violence by taking the profit out of the drug business. Will you sign my petition?" One African-American man did not sign, instead he just stared at me a long moment and then entered Walgreen's without signing or speaking. I thought, he either doesn't like white guys or he's suffered some horrible drug experience." Nervously, I awaited the man to exit the store. Finally, he did. "What did you say to me?" he asked. I repeated my spiel verbatim. Then, he spoke, "Let me ask you this. A black woman works as a domestic making $150 a week. She's unmarried and has five kids. The oldest is 16 (years of age) and brings home $600 a week, which his mom uses to support the family. Why should that woman vote for you?" Wham. The drug war does do some good. James E. Gierach Oak Lawn - --- MAP posted-by: Beth