Pubdate: 27 September, 1998 Source: Bulletin, The (OR) Contact: http://www.bendbulletin.com Author: Stephen Wellcome LEGALIZE DRUGS The writer of your editorial, No on Measure 67, apparently believes our present drug laws actually keep people from using illeagal drugs. Surveys regularly report that young people find marijuana easier to obtain than alcohol, so the notion that drug prohibition actually prohibits anything is dubious at best. When one further observes that the rate of teen marijuana use in the Netherlands, where marijuana is readily available to adults, is slightly lower than it is in the United States, one must severely question the efficacy of drug prohibition. The reason is not hard to find. Alcohol is sold by regulalted, licensed dealers who generally respect laws against selling to minors. Drugs such as marijuana are distributed by crime syndicates that will sell to anybody, anywhere. The astronomical profits resulting from prohibition guarantee there will always be an accomodating drug dealer within easy reach, with plenty of eager replacements if any dealer happens to get arrested. Given that back ground, it is clear that sick people who believe marijuana helps them will continue to use it. If we do not provide them a legitimate source of the drug, they will continue to do what they do now: obtain the drug from criminal sources. Which alternative is better for the patients? Which is a better message for our children: that sick people ought to be arrested, persecuted, and put in jail? - --- Checked-by: Rolf Ernst