Pubdate: January 28,1998 Source: The Aegis Contact: Letters to the Editor, 10 Hays Street, P.O. Box 189, Bel Air, MD 21014-0189 PROPOSED CURE FOR DRUG PROBLEMS I read with much interest your Jan 14 article about the planned emphasis on rehabilitating drug offenders. Although a step in the right direction, increased efforts for drug rehabilitation are but a Band-Aid placed upon a gaping wound caused by the War on Drugs. The War has been generated from laws being passed to create consensual crimes that occur when a person participates in an activity that harms nobody except possibly himself. Of course, once the desirable activity is made illegal, the consensual crime creates opportunities for real crimes, corruption, and large local and national governments to flourish. The War injures the adventurous and rebellious young, the emotionally disturbed, and the poor, but the War has been a boon to lawyers, law enforcement and punishment officials, drug pushers, and activists predicting the end of this sinful world. I propose decriminalizing drugs while placing more emphasis upon drug-user rehabilitation. Alcohol and tobacco would be lumped together with the newly legalized drugs. The money to finance drug rehabilitation programs would come from taxes imposed upon the sale of all these drugs. Request for rehabilitation would be voluntary or coerced by an employee's company. The drug's tax amount would be clearly stated to emphasize that the drug may inflict pain as well as impart pleasure. Drug pushers (now respectable corporate entities) would need to clearly state the possible harmful side effects and the current number of people undergoing rehabilitation. Drug manufacturers and sellers would be barred from employing movie actors to push drugs, as currently occurs with tobacco (see The Baltimore Sun series on cigars, 1/11/98-1/13/98). Misleading advertising would not be tolerated. Critics of legalizing drugs often point to the problems that we have with alcohol and tobacco and question why we would want to increase the quantity of drugs used. The drug policy outlined above would, if well implemented, not only decrease alcohol and tobacco use, but decrease other drug use as well. Divisions between old and young could be healed and the nation could go forward to solve urgent problems that have been ignored because of our acute involvement with the Drug War. Kevin Fansler