Pubdate: Fri, 09 Feb 2007 Source: State Press, The (AZ Edu) Copyright: 2007 ASU Web Devil Contact: http://www.asuwebdevil.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3961 Author: Tim Gomez Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/af.htm (Asset Forfeiture) DRUG POLICY TOO HARSH TO BE EFFECTIVE I concur with Matthew Neff, Tyler Thompson and Macy Hanson that U.S. drug policy is broken. As long as asset forfeiture exists, drug offenders will never be treated as other criminals. Convicting a meth king would bring in a substantial paycheck to the police, unlike a serial rapist. This is why police love to find drug addicts. We pick them up, collect our money and lock them behind the iron bars of "justice," while we let the homeless, wife-beating bike thief attend anger management classes. What about addiction management classes? Only a minute amount of convicted drug offenders get the opportunity to attend a class because we as Americans think of drug use as the deadliest of sins. Yet, parents drug their kids with amphetamines and stimulants because of a disorder referred to as attention deficit disorder. It should be no surprise that these kids grow up to try and abuse other substances. We should focus more on prevention all together. Let's stop building prisons and build better communities so fewer people will turn to drugs, and in turn, we will be saving lives rather than throwing them away. We're running out of room for prisons. I wonder when the first U.S. prison outside of America will be built. At the rate we're going, we can expect to see construction beginning in Mexico in 2030. Tim Gomez SOPHOMORE - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman