Pubdate: Thu, 10 Jan 2008
Source: Monitor, The (McAllen, TX)
Copyright: 2008 The Monitor
Contact:  http://www.themonitor.com
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1250
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization)

OUT OF CONTROL

It May Be Time To Get Rid Of Drug Laws -- Or At Least Change Them.

If the drug-war violence that erupted this week across the border in 
Rio Bravo and in Reynosa leaves you apprehensive, your head is 
probably in the right place.

It is a very scary situation akin to the Capone-era gangland wars in 
Chicago in the 1920s and 1930s, which left scores of bad guys and 
innocent bystanders dead and injured.

Although we would like to think not, there is a distinct possibility 
- -- because of the extreme mobility of the cross-border illicit drug 
trade and its practitioners -- that more of this violence could 
spread to the U.S. side. We say "more" because if you think it isn't 
already happening here, you're deluding yourself. Many of the stories 
we have covered regarding home invasions, burned bodies found in 
cars, corpses discovered here and there around the Valley and 
instances in which U.S. Border Patrol officers have been fired on 
from across the Rio Grande have been associated with cross-border 
drug trafficking.

We have so far been spared overt violence like that which broke out 
this week in the streets of Rio Bravo and Reynosa. But how much 
longer we will be able to say that remains to be seen unless the 
Mexican government moves swiftly and decisively to break up the 
warring cartels. That, however, might be only a temporary fix.

Even if the existing cartels are broken up and their leaders jailed 
or more permanently dispatched, it will be just a matter of time 
before new ones take their place so long as there is the sort of 
money to be made that comes from drug trafficking.

Before truly effective action can be taken to halt the Mexican drug 
wars and the possibility of them spilling more overtly across the 
river, two things must happen:

Mexico must get a grip on the corruption within the government, its 
law enforcement agencies and its military that helps enable the 
traffickers to go about their business and to acquire the weapons 
necessary to enforce their will.

We must get a grip on the U.S. demand for the illicit drugs -- 
primarily marijuana and cocaine --the Mexican cartels are pushing. 
Without the demand in this country -- the world's leader in illegal 
drug use -- the traffic out of Mexico might not dry up, but it 
certainly would be far less profitable and, therefore, much less prevalent.

But what can be done to lessen the U.S. demand?

Clearly, the now decades-long "war on drugs" waged by our government 
- -- fueled by our stand on drug prohibition -- is having little 
effect. Keep in mind that it was the Volstead Act that outlawed the 
sale and consumption of alcoholic beverages in the United States from 
the 1920s into the early 1930s that gave rise to the bootleg trade 
that stoked gangland violence in Chicago and other U.S. cities and 
led to the ballooning of the organized crime we still contend with.

Ted Galen Carpenter, vice president for defense and foreign policy 
studies for the Cato Institute, a Washington-based Libertarian think 
tank, wrote in his 2006 article "Strung Out: Prohibition Stays Put 
South of the Border" that:

"Most of the corruption and violence (in Mexico) is caused by the 
enormous black-market premium in the illicit-drug trade. The risk 
factor involved in defying the law means that drugs sell on the 
street for 10 to 20 times more than they would in a legal setting. An 
aggressive trafficking organization can make tens -- or even hundreds 
- -- of millions of dollars a year. That huge financial lure attracts 
those people who are most inclined to risk jail or death in a 
cutthroat trade -- in other words, the most ruthless and 
violence-prone elements."

Carpenter, who has long studied the relationship between our 
government's drug prohibition laws and the growing drug violence in 
Mexico, has concluded that the time is past due to reconsider 
relaxing or doing away with those prohibitions.

Considering the potential for that violence to spill into the streets 
on this side of the Rio Grande, we agree that the time for that 
reconsideration is at hand.
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom