Pubdate: Fri, 21 Mar 2003 Source: Portland Tribune (OR) Copyright: 2003 Portland Tribune Contact: http://www.portlandtribune.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2056 Author: Floyd Ferris Landrath DRUG LAWS STRAIN POLICE RESOURCES For more than a decade the American Antiprohibition League has been warning lawmakers that this day would come, the breakdown of civil authority accompanied by unchecked crime (Budget cuts cripple long arm of the law, March 4). However, it's not too late to save our criminal justice system from complete "meltdown," as Portland Police Chief Mark Kroeker put it. I think it's long overdue that our lawmakers drop this phony bravado of "tough on drugs" and get smart on drug policy. It's clear that drug prohibition, plus drug addiction, generate a lot of crime and cost a lot of money. We have learned that a very large share of our public safety resources is spent on a few hundred chronic offenders who cycle through the system ad infinitum. It's no secret that most of this select group are junkies, crackheads and speed freaks, committing mostly nonviolent property crimes or trafficking in drugs to finance their often multiple addictions. It should be understood, relative to the total number of people who use any illegal substance, that this subgroup represents a small, albeit very expensive, minority. So, what if there were a way to keep most of these troublemakers, the habitual offenders, out of the system? What if we could prevent much of their criminal activity, drug dealing? Start from the basic, albeit obscured and oppressed, premise: The law notwithstanding, adults have a natural right -- respecting the rights of others, of course -- to smoke, snort, ingest or inject any drug they want. Once you accept this basic reality, then it's merely a question of creating reasonable regulations to govern the manufacture and distribution of the particular substance. After that, for better or for worse, it's up to the individual. Granted, drug addiction is a tragic, sometimes fatal fate, and I am in full support of drug education, prevention and voluntary treatment. Nonetheless, I am unwilling to sacrifice my freedom or our scarce public resources because a few addicts are bent on self-destruction or because lawmakers remain stuck on stupid about drugs. Floyd Ferris Landrath, American Antiprohibition League Southeast Portland - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom