Pubdate: Sat, 13 Mar 1999 Source: Daily Star (NY) Contact: http://www.thedailystar.com/ Forum: http://www.dailystar.com.lb/post/ Author: Bruce Dunn GOVERNMENT SHOULD RETHINK DRUG WAR Experts generally agree the U.S. drug-addicted population peaked around 1900. After this time, drug and alcohol use declined steadily across all segments of the population. This was due to the increased awareness of the dangers of drug addiction. Following the passage of the Pure Food and Drug Act of 1906, the largest decrease in narcotics use to ever occur happened. When people discovered on the new ingredient labels that some of their favorite nostrums were laced with addictive drugs, their use declined by a third. The typical addict at the time was a middle-aged, middle-class, southern white woman hooked on laudanum. The image of a drug user as vampire had yet to be created. There was in the early 1900s a great moral uprising. It had begun 50 years earlier with a growing intolerance to the "demon alcohol" and came to include the opiates and cocaine. This moral upsurge eventuated in the Harrison Narcotics Act in 1914 and Prohibition in 1920. The crusaders were many and well-intentioned, but the menace was so evil that truth gave way to propaganda and statistics were created from whole cloth. Race cards were played. Ends justified means. Laudanum-sipping white women became drug-crazed "unbridled Negroes and coolies waiting at the foot of the bed to carry off wives and daughters." And in the finest of tradition, a scapegoat was born. Politicians and well-meaning others have been heaping it on the goat ever since. Not incidental to these prohibited things was the beginning of a criminal empire. In 1969, the Nixon Administration spent $65 million on the drug war. It's up to about $19 billion this year. In 1980, there 50,000 drug prisoners, today 400,000-plus. Profits of illegal drug barons are estimated to exceed the national defense budget. Is this the way to go? Bruce Dunn - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck