Pubdate: Wed, 19 Jul 2000 Source: Amarillo Globe-News (TX) Copyright: 2000 Amarillo Globe-News Contact: P.O. Box 2091, Amarillo, TX 79166 Fax: (806) 373-0810 Website: http://amarillonet.com/ Forum: http://208.138.68.214:90/eshare/server?action4 Author: John Chase Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v00/n955/a08.html MESSAGE RECEIVED? In today's political environment, drug courts are preferred to incarceration. Almost no one - even Gov. Gary Johnson, I suspect - disagrees with that. The fact that you, according to your July 11 editorial, consider drug courts and the governor's proposals to be mutually exclusive tells me you do not understand the governor. The public has been conditioned to not distinguish the danger of the drug from the danger of its illegality. But there is a huge difference. Our most striking example is the national prohibition of alcohol in the 1920s. Before Prohibition, we had alcoholism and saloons, with their attendant social ills. During Prohibition, we had alcoholism, the proliferation of speakeasies and increased teen-age drinking. We also had hundreds of thousands of deaths, blindings and paralyses from adulterated alcohol, rampant official corruption and lethal turf battles. Our grandparents, who remembered life before Prohibition, decided the cure was worse than the disease and abandoned Prohibition. Not in the past 67 years has there been a serious proposal to return to national prohibition. We need drug courts to ameliorate the abusive sentences, human waste and financial burden of the present system. We also need to understand that these drug courts are made necessary not by drugs themselves, but by our outlawing of them. There is no popular substance so destructive that it cannot be made more so by outlawing it. That is the governor's message. John Chase, Palm Harbor, Fla. - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk