Pubdate: Fri, 17 Oct 2003 Source: Good 5 Cent Cigar (RI Edu) Contact: 2003 Good 5 Cent Cigar Website: http://www.ramcigar.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2599 Author: Justin Holmes LETTER ABOUT DRUG POLICY LAUGHABLE To the Cigar: I have never met Chris Ferdinandi, but I must say I got a good, full-belly laugh out the empty rhetoric, raving idiocy, and unmitigated doublespeak in his recent letter to the editor. First of all, Chris: You're absolutely right that many (most!!) drug policy reformers are fighting for their own (and everyone else's) right to have control over which substances they put into their own bodies. Nobody, not even Mr. Medical-Marijuana-Forced-Treatment-John-Walters-Heckler Tom Angell denies this. Secondly, the drug policy reform movement is chiefly concerned with the drug problem in this nation and world. Fighting for personal autonomy and recognizing the drug problem are not opposing views - in fact they are one and the same. The primary cause of the drug problem is the backward, worthless policy of prohibition. This movement wants to address the problem with serious, honest education and easy access to treatment, and the fact of the matter is no workable solution can involve a revolving door prison system or a massive black market. Prohibition has never worked, and it never will. People that support the status quo are the ones who don't care about the drug epidemic. I'd say the line that I find most entertaining from Chris' letter (in fact I just went back and read it again and laughed out loud a second time) is "Those truly concerned with social reform have many other options available to them that don't support illegal drug users." This is such a ridiculous and nonsensical collage of English words that it's difficult to even begin to address it. The term "illegal drug users" is really a bad choice here in this argument. The drug policy reform movement doesn't see the distinction between illegal drug users and other drug users. Between tobacco, alcohol, caffeine, currently illicit drugs, and prescription drugs, very close to every American is at least an occasional "drug user". Obviously, some have serious problems with drugs and some don't, and there are a wide array of conditions in between. Saying that we don't want to offer "support" to drug users is, well, absolutely contrary to the task of remedying our "drug problem." If Chris had offered any kind of alternate solution, or even any good ideas of any kind, people might take his letter seriously. Until then, it just makes for a fantastic comedy. Justin Holmes, SUNY New Paltz Student Senate, New Paltz NORML / SSDP - --- MAP posted-by: Derek