Pubdate: Thu, 21 Oct 2004 Source: Ocean County Observer (NJ) Copyright: 2004 Ocean County Observer Contact: http://www.injersey.com/observer/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1212 Author: Edward H. Decker Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?137 (Needle Exchange) NEEDLE EXCHANGE PROGRAMS SHOULD WORK IN N.J. Sen. Leonard T. Connors, R-9th, says this about drug abuse, and the needle exchange program: "The continued support of law enforcement and their efforts to apprehend those who break laws established to curtail drug usage in our communities must still be recognized as the best approach." The drug war in this country started in 1914 with the passing of the Harrison Narcotic Act. That makes this war 90 years old, and law enforcement hasn't curtailed drug use anymore than Prohibition stopped people from drinking. Law enforcement arrests people and gives them criminal records, which means that, even if addicts get clean, the likelihood of them getting good jobs and becoming productive members of society is still about nil. Our politicians never do anything about the reasons people take drugs. The government dumped more than 50,000 heroin addicts on society after the Vietnam War. I wonder how many there will be from this war, since they are fighting in the biggest opium countries in the world. How about the 1.7 million more people living in poverty now than two years ago, and 3 million more since President Bush has been in office? According to the U.S. Census Bureau, there are now more than 40 million people without health insurance and our senior citizens have to go to Canada to get drugs, while our politicians try to pass laws to keep them from doing that. Illegal aliens are flooding the country, getting free education for their kids and health care for themselves while working Americans have to pay for it. Apparently it depends on whose studies anti-needle exchange people look at when they say the programs don't work, because the School of Public Health, University of California in Berkeley, and the Institute for Health Policy Studies, University of California, San Francisco, did studies for the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and they say they do work. Before politicians attack the needle exchange, or any other drug program, perhaps they should spend some time pushing a national health plan, or at least stop giving free health care to all the illegal aliens in this country. We don't need to vote anymore; what we need to do is send the politicians to Afghanistan, so they can see where the drugs the addicts are using are coming from. EDWARD H. DECKER Whiting - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake