Pubdate: Sun, 30 Jul 2006 Source: North Shore News (CN BC) Copyright: 2006 North Shore News Contact: http://www.nsnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/311 Author: Greg Francisco EDUCATION, REGULATION BETTER THAN BANS Dear Editor: A recent North Shore News column gets it right, sort of (Society Must Take a Stand on Drug Use, July 19). Drug abuse is harmful to individuals, families and society. That's patently obvious. But it doesn't automatically follow from there that prohibition is good. By any objective standard, the two most dangerous drugs in our society are tobacco and alcohol. Combined they account for millions of premature deaths around the world every single year. So if we're going to start selectively prohibiting recreational drug use, those two should logically be first. Indeed, we tried alcohol prohibition. It didn't work. It's not working with other drugs either. On the other hand, by "tak(ing) a stand on (tobacco) use," society has dramatically slashed the rate of teenage tobacco addiction over the past two decades. Very few had to go to jail, at taxpayers' expense, by the way, to make that happen. Instead, we wisely adopted a public health model to deal with tobacco. Education, prevention and treatment, combined with regulated sales by licensed businesses and clerks who check ID. All the criminal drug dealer cares to see from our kids is the cash. Most effectively of all though, we "took a stand" by making tobacco use socially unacceptable. Teen peer pressure cuts both ways. As Gil Yard's column correctly implies, much of the attraction of illicit drugs is their "outlaw" status, a story as old as Adam and Eve and as timely as today's front page. Educate, regulate, tax, and control. There is a better way. Greg Francisco Paw Paw, MI - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman