Pubdate: May 8th 1999 Source: Baltimore Sun (MD) Copyright: 1999 by The Baltimore Sun, a Times Mirror Newspaper. Contact: http://www.sunspot.net/ Forum: http://www.sunspot.net/cgi-bin/ultbb/Ultimate.cgi?actionintro Author: Kevin Fansler Note: Kevin, after helping Tom O'Connell to screen news for the DrugSense Weekly, turned to some LTE writing. This shows that if you write them, sooner or later you will be published! Way to go, Kevin! STOP THE DRUG WAR BEFORE IT DOES MORE DAMAGE In The Sun's April 28 article "The straight dope" Jill Jones, curator of the Drug Enforcement Administration's museum, noted that we are experiencing a drug epidemic. She takes the view that we have had heavy drug use before and the present epidemic will be quelled. But at what cost? In 1980, after an intitial escalation by President Richard Nixon, the United States was spending less than $2 billion on the drug war and fewer than 2,000 drug-related deaths occurred. In 1998, after further escalations by Presidents Reagan, Bush and Clinton, the cost was approximately $17 billion and 14,000 drug-related deaths. Escalating the drug war has been counterproductive. Alcohol abuse is destructive, but we repealed Prohibition because it caused even more harm. Drug prohibition shares many of the same problems as alcohol prohibition. The drug war has corrupted law enforcement, eroded constitutional freedoms, generated a thriving criminal black market and criminalized the casual user and the abuser alike while a steady supply of drugs reaches our youth. We should treat drug abuse as a public health problem instead of further escalating the drug war. Kevin Fansler Havre de Grace, MD - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake