Pubdate: Wed, 03 Sep 2003 Source: Chatham This Week (CN ON) Copyright: 2003 Bowes Publishers Limited Contact: http://www.bowesnet.com/ctw/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/719 Authors: Alan and Eleanor Randell Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) DRUGS PROVIDE A SCAPEGOAT Dear editor: Re: Search finds grow house and marijuana (Aug. 20, Chatham This Week). Why do governments prohibit certain drugs? Is it to protect users from harm? No, that can't be the reason because users suffer more (adulterated drugs and jail time) when a drug is banned as compared to when it is legally available. My wife and I became well acquainted with this aspect of government policy when we lost our 19-year-old son to street heroin in 1993. Many more people died from the effects of bad booze during Prohibition than when alcohol was legally available. The harm argument is moot in any event because two of our more dangerous drugs, alcohol and tobacco, are legal. Is it to reduce the crime associated with illegal drugs? No, that can't be the reason because banning a drug always gives rise to more crime (drug cartels, petty crimes by users as prohibition makes drug prices much higher, violent disputes between dealers) than when the drug is legally available. Is it a brutal, Hitler-like pogrom to distract and entertain the majority by ruining the lives of the innocent minority who ingest or sell certain drugs? Bingo! In short, drugs are highly useful, functional and beneficial scapegoats. They provide a ruling class with fig leaves to place over the unsightly social ills that are endemic to the social system over which they preside and they give the general public a focus for blame in which a chemical 'bogeyman,' or the 'deviants' who ingest it, are the root cause for a wide array of complex social problems. Why do we put up with this loathsome program? Because the media support it. Why do the media support drug prohibition? Let us count the ways: 1. It provides many "exciting" news stories and pictures about various busts, murders and assaults as well as adrenaline-pumping accounts of cops battering down doors - usually in the poorer areas of our cities and towns. 2. It enables editors to wax poetic as they pledge their undying support for these fascist-like horrors "to protect the children", taking care to omit the hell some children are thrust into when their parents are jailed for the "crime" of using or selling a drug the majority doesn't approve of. 3. It provides many opportunities to publish "moving" accounts of born again former drug users giving their just-say-no nonsense to a roomful of children and imploring the kids, "don't do what I did, do what I say" as they pocket speaking fees and expenses far in excess of what they could earn if they hadn't clambered aboard the taxpayer-funded drug war gravy train. 4. It provides many drug scare stories passed along by the cops who are anxious to keep prohibition going because it provides them with bigger budgets and more power - not to mention free drugs. 5. Those drug-sniffing pooches are so cute! 6. Misery, suffering and hatred sell more newspapers and produce higher TV ratings than happiness, contentment and love. Perhaps the world would have been a better place of the mass media had never been invented. Alan and Eleanor Randell, Victoria, BC - --- MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager