Pubdate: Fri, 25 Apr 2008 Source: Baxter Bulletin, The (AR) Copyright: 2008 The Baxter Bulletin. Contact: http://www.baxterbulletin.com/customerservice/contactus.html Website: http://www.baxterbulletin.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2860 Author: Robert Sharpe Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v08/n411/a07.html TREATING ADDICTS IS A BETTER SOLUTION Regarding your April 21 editorial: Alcohol prohibition once financed urban terrorism between rival gangsters, but that's no reason to reinstate it. Intensifying the drug war is the equivalent of throwing good money after bad. The supply-side drug war provides artificial price supports for organized crime at home and terrorists abroad. Make no mistake, the drug war is a cure worse than the disease. Attempts to limit the supply of illegal drugs while demand remains constant only increase the profitability of drug trafficking. For addictive drugs like heroin, a spike in street prices leads desperate addicts to increase criminal activity to feed desperate habits. The drug war doesn't fight crime, it fuels crime. There is a middle ground between drug prohibition and blanket legalization. Afghanistan profits from the opium trade because of drug prohibition, not in spite of it. Heroin produced in Afghanistan is primarily consumed in Europe, a continent already experimenting with harm reduction alternatives to the U.S. drug war. Switzerland's heroin maintenance program has been shown to reduce disease, death and crime among chronic users. Providing addicts with standardized doses in a clinical setting eliminates many of the problems associated with heroin use. Heroin maintenance pilot projects are underway in Canada, Germany, Spain and the Netherlands. If expanded, prescription heroin maintenance would deprive organized crime of a core client base. This would render illegal heroin trafficking unprofitable, spare future generations addiction and undermine Taliban funding in Afghanistan. The illicit drug of choice in America is domestically grown marijuana, not Afghan heroin or Colombian cocaine. Marijuana should be taxed and regulated like alcohol, only without the ubiquitous advertising. Separating the hard and soft drug markets is critical. As long as marijuana distribution is controlled by organized crime, consumers of the most popular illicit drug will continue to come into contact with sellers of addictive drugs like cocaine and heroin. This "gateway" is the direct result of a U.S. drug policy based on cultural norms rather than health outcomes. Given that marijuana is arguably safer than legal alcohol -- the plant has never been shown to cause an overdose death -- it makes no sense to waste scarce resources on failed policies that finance organized crime and facilitate hard-drug use. Drug policy reform may send the wrong message to children, but I like to think the children are more important than the message. For information on the efficacy of heroin maintenance, please read the following British Medical Journal report: http://bmj.bmjjournals.com/cgi/content/full/327/7410/310 To learn more about Canada's heroin maintenance research please visit: http://www.naomistudy.ca/. Robert Sharpe, Policy Analyst Common Sense for Drug Policy Washington, D.C. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin