Pubdate: Thu, 16 Dec 2010 Source: Gainesville Sun, The (FL) Copyright: 2010 The Gainesville Sun Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/yMmn4Ifw Website: http://www.gainesville.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/163 Author: William Dixon Note: William Dixon is a graduate of Columbia University, New York Medical College and the USF College of Business Administration. He was an Assistant Professor of Surgery at the University of Georgia before entering private practice. He served 11 years in the Army as a surgeon and as a Special Forces Officer, achieving the rank of Lieutenant Colonel. OUR INSANE WAR ON DRUGS In Mexico the drug cartels bribe politicians and police officers while slaughtering those whom they can't buy. Murders this year of gang members, government officials and innocent bystanders number in the thousands. Related Links: In New York arrests were made of five University students selling drugs out of their dorm rooms " to pay for college". Students at one of the nation's elite universities selling drugs? What next? Albert Einstein defined insanity as "doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results". That is what we have been doing in our efforts to combat illicit drugs. We've been fighting with the same failed methods for over thirty years at a cost of trillions in salaries for the "enforcers" and trillions more in crime and loss of human lives. We've established an army of law enforcement officers and prison guards. We've built new prisons to detain drug-related criminals and many who are labeled criminals simply for using illicit drugs without committing any other crime. We've passed laws to permit monitoring of suspected drug dealers in ways which deprive them of Constitutional protections. When they are arrested, we've confiscated their private property before they have had a trial or a guilty verdict. We have tried commercials aimed at young people warning of the dangers of drug use. We've tried the D.A.R.E. program where officers come to schools to counsel children. Neither commercials nor DARE nor similar interventions aimed at young people have had any measurable success in reducing drug experimentation and use. Illicit drug sales in the U.S. are somewhere between $60 billion and $100 billion a year. (No one knows for sure because drug dealers don't report income.) Estimates have 15 percent to 20 percent of Americans using illicit drugs. Over half of all high school students have experimented with illegal drugs; 85 percent if alcohol is included. The trend has been toward less use in the past few years, but the numbers remain shocking. We are not winning this "war" because it cannot be won unless the laws governing economic behavior since the beginning of recorded history somehow change. Where there is demand for a product, at the right price a supplier will always appear. Making the product illegal only raises its price. In 1919 Congress prohibited the consumption of alcohol. (Alcohol is more damaging in many respects than is marijuana.) The result was consumption of impure contraband alcohol resulting in deaths and injuries. Crime cartels quickly developed to respond to the demand for high priced illegal liquor. Police and government officials were bought off. People had the good sense to repeal Prohibition in 1933. Fast forward to 2010. Congress has prohibited the use of mind altering drugs for years with no success and at immeasurable cost. It should be obvious by now that the demand for drugs cannot be completely eliminated. Nor can the supply be cut off. How long must we persist in our failed "war on drugs"? Are we insane as Einstein suggests? Will we ever be willing to decriminalize and regulate these drugs the way we do alcohol and tobacco? The only way to eliminate the drug cartels and the vice and crime they support is to make a "legal" supply available. In doing so we could save thousands of lives each year and tens of billions of dollars of enforcement expenses. We could eliminate half of our prison population and the cost of confining them. Even local law enforcement would cost less. With legalization and no one motivated to push drugs, their usage may fall off as it did in the Netherlands. What's needed is a fact-based public discussion of the problem free of the hysteria and morality plays which accompany any mention of decriminalization. William Dixon is a graduate of Columbia University, New York Medical College and the USF College of Business Administration. He was an Assistant Professor of Surgery at the University of Georgia before entering private practice. He served 11 years in the Army as a surgeon and as a Special Forces Officer, achieving the rank of Lieutenant Colonel. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D