Pubdate: Tue, 23 Sep 2008
Source: Times, The (UK)
Copyright: 2008 Times Newspapers Ltd
Contact:  http://www.the-times.co.uk/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/454
Author: Ross Clark

IT'S JUST AS WRONG TO USE DRUGS AS IT IS TO SELL THEM

George Michael Has Been Treated Far Too Leniently

Imagine being a latterday Pontius Pilate presented with two offenders
and faced with a dilemma: which to grant a second chance and which to
sentence to a long term in jail. Do you free the nervous Jamaican
single mum caught at Heathrow with 30 capsules of cocaine in her
intestines, having been persuaded to act as a drug mule by a gang
promising money to educate her children? Or the multimillionaire pop
star caught with crack cocaine in a London public lavatory?

No prizes for guessing which gets let off under Britain's bizarrely
inconsistent war against drugs. The former can expect about eight
years in Holloway prison, which is bulging with drug mules.

As for the latter, George Michael was released with a caution after
being caught red-handed in Hampstead last Friday, despite this being
his second offence in 18 months - last May he was given a brief
driving ban and ordered to do community service after being found
slumped in his car with cannabis and liquid Ecstasy in his blood.

With stolen goods, illegal weapons and child pornography, the law is
clear: the user is as guilty as the supplier. The police didn't let
Gary Glitter off with a little rap on the knuckles and the rest of us
didn't shake our heads and say: "Poor Gary, how sad that he has fallen
victim to these evil porn dealers."

He was prosecuted, quite rightly, on the basis that those who provide
the market for child porn are implicated in its production. So why
then do such different attitudes persist in the case of drugs? If it
is wrong to produce and trade drugs, then it is equally wrong to use
them.

And yet how many drug users live in fear of ending up behind
bars?

At worst they can expect to be ordered to attend a rehabilitation
centre, where they will be showered with therapy and treated as victims.

Or even heroes: remember David Cameron saying that he was "incredibly
proud" of a relative who had been through treatment for an addiction
to hard drugs? Among drug users and drug peddlers alike, there are, of
course, sometimes mitigating circumstances. If you have been brought
up by drug addicts, beaten and abused, it shouldn't come as too much
of a surprise if you grow up with a somewhat confused sense of right
and wrong.

But none of this applies to George Michael, who is intelligent enough
to know that taking crack is not just an issue of personal liberty:
there is a clear association between use of the drug and propensity to
commit violent crime. If caught with illegal drugs he should be
treated to no less a punishment than if he had smuggled them into the
country and sold them on the streets.
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MAP posted-by: Steve Heath