Pubdate: Fri, 05 Aug 2005 Source: Post-Standard, The (NY) Copyright: 2005, Syracuse Post-Standard Contact: http://www.syracuse.com/poststandard/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/686 Author: Mark David Blum ANOTHER LOST GENERATION? Just Watch While the Vacuum Sucks in Others To the Editor: Congratulations are in order to local police agencies for taking down another organized criminal enterprise. Another group of real bad guys is now safely behind bars; 16 people destined to spend eternity underground somewhere near Lawrence, Kansas. People can now breathe easier. Children can now play stickball in the streets. We can rejoice, as the city is now that much safer. I want safer streets. "Organized criminal enterprises" are a threat to us all. Nobody should have to live in fear of random violence. No group has the right to dominate and control a neighborhood. It is unreasonable to tolerate sociopathic behavior. The Post-Standard hooted and howled at the arrests: "Syracuse police Chief Gary Miguel said the Boot Camp case resulted in lower crime rates in the gang's territory." Boot Camp? Boot Camp was another gang mass-arrested and prosecuted two years ago. Dozens of people's lives were destroyed, and an entire generation of young men from a particular neighborhood disappeared. Everybody said peace and love would reign. A brief review of how life in the city has evolved since the Boot Camp arrests shows that shootings and drug violence are on the increase. To quote the newspaper, " 'A whole new group came in after they took the old group away,' said Odell Tillie, who lives in the heart of Boot Camp territory near Midland Avenue and West Colvin Street." Now the U.S. attorney and his minions have hung out huge "Job Opening" signs all over the former Elk Block territory. Every time you arrest a drug dealer you create a job opening. For obvious reasons, the poor and hopeless find their way into the business. Police keep arresting them, and prosecutors and judges keep imprisoning them. Demand, however, fuels a substantial market vacuum. With the sudden removal of the supplyside of the equation and the fantastic sums of money to be made in the business, others quickly rush in to fill the void. What happens, though, when two competing organizations want to market their product in the same territory? Death, destruction, shootings, violence and instability in the market. Look at the history since the Boot Camp arrests: more money, more police; more arrests and imprisonments; drug violence escalating. Prohibitionists are to blame. Instead of working for a way to enable business disputes to be settled with high-powered lawyers in courtrooms, they insist on a policy that leaves no option but high-powered weapons on street corners. Fortunately for all of us, the gangs that moved into the former Boot Camp territory cannot shoot straight. That giant sucking sound you hear coming now from Elk Block will draw in another generation. In two years, will you applaud Chief Miguel when he sweeps up another generation of young adult males in a particular neighborhood? What a horrifying picture: an entire community whose only way out of poverty and hopelessness is through federal prison. The Syracuse Common Council is now considering what is affectionately referred to as "Plan B" an alternative to prohibition. The business of drugs and the monopoly held by organized crime is so bad, so dangerous, that the only rational policy is containment, regulation and control. We have spent 30 years and hundreds of billions of dollars enforcing this failed policy of prohibition. Are you going to change your policy before or after these new gangs learn how to better aim their weapons? How many more dead and wounded is it going to take? Mark David Blum Manlius - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom