Pubdate: Fri, 19 Mar 1999 Date: 03/19/1999 Source: Orlando Sentinel (FL) Author: Peter H. Renner Note: Headline by newshawk REGARDING KERRY Wilensky's March 12 "My Word": There are three levels at which we can direct our drug-abuse abatement efforts: 1. interdiction, 2. incarceration or 3. education. The first two do not work. We interdict an estimated 10 percent of the incoming flow of drugs at a stupendous expense to the taxpayer. We incarcerate young people who are convicted users/distributors. Does the problem go away? Of course not. And why not? As Wilensky states in his on-the-mark essay, as long as there is a coolness, a panache to using drugs by our young people, there will continue to be a demand, ergo, a supply. No getting around it. As I recently discussed with an Orlando juvenile judge, who had that day sentenced a 13-year-old to incarceration per the law, interdiction is not the answer and neither is incarceration. Until young people understand that it is not cool to take drugs, there will be a constant proliferation of drug abuse. Take the schoolkids to jails to talk with convicted abusers. Take them to hospitals and asylums where the "bummed-out" wrecks can be observed and interviewed firsthand. Show them what really happens to abusers, and we may just be able to get the point across that drugs are not cool. Peter H. Renner, ORLANDO