Pubdate: Fri, 23 Sep 2005 Source: Similkameen Spotlight (CN BC) Copyright: 2005 Similkameen Spotlight Contact: http://www.similkameenspotlight.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3484 Author: Clifford Schaffer Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v05/n1431/a04.html?118766 LONG SENTENCES WON'T WORK Editor: If John Martin thinks long prison sentences will solve the meth problem, he needs only to look at the United States to see the folly of that. We have the biggest prisons in the world, with more people incarcerated for drug offences than Europe has total prisoners -- even though the European Union has about 50 per cent more people than the U.S.If he will pick up a copy of one of the recent issues of Newsweek, he will see a full cover story decrying the latest "meth epidemic." Obviously, the biggest prisons on the planet didn't solve this problem and Canada can't afford the biggest prisons on the planet. The truth is the "meth epidemic" isn't the truth. Meth is nothing new and has been around since before the "Speed Kills" slogans of the 1960s. Overall, there is little evidence that rates of meth use are much different than they have been for decades. What there is evidence of is a concerted mediaefpowers and toys for cops. Go to any law-enforcement site on the Internet that has a page on the meth crisis. Look at their first recommended solution. It will always be "more money for cops." That is the complete explanation for the current "meth crisis." Clifford Schaffer, Director DRCNet Online Library of Drug Policy http://www.druglibrary.org Agua Dulce, California - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom