Pubdate: Sun, 09 Jan 2011
Source: Hartford Courant (CT)
Copyright: 2011 The Hartford Courant
Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/IpIfHam4
Website: http://www.courant.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/183
Author: Tom Condon
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization)

LEGALIZING DRUGS WOULD STOP THE BLEEDING

Here we go again. The new year dawned in Hartford a week ago with a 
double homicide on Francis Avenue in Parkville, normally a pretty 
quiet street. One of the two suspects, 20-year-old Jose Medina, was 
caught after a harrowing car chase with a sizable stash of heroin and 
other drugs in his car.

It's not yet known if the slayings were, in the all-too-common 
phrase, "drug-related," but lethal violence around illegal drugs has 
been a scourge of Hartford for more than three decades. Despite the 
best efforts of two generations of police officers as well as 
prosecutors and others, it continues.

Although overall crime numbers are down somewhat, the specter of 
violence inhibits growth and economic development. For example, a New 
Jersey developer bought and rehabbed 10 handsome apartment buildings 
on Bedford Street in the North End, spending more than $5 million, 
but has had all kinds of trouble renting them because of drugs and 
related gunplay in the area.

The "war on drugs" approach hasn't worked, at staggering cost. Is 
there another way to stop this insanity?

A couple of days before the Parkville shootings, a once-prominent 
Hartford crime figure, Anthony "Tony" Volpe, cashed out his chips. In 
an eloquent obituary, The Courant's Ed Mahony reported that Volpe 
once presided over illegal gambling and related activities, but "at 
the end, there was little over which to preside." The mob's illegal 
gambling business was eviscerated by legal gambling.

Which raises this question -- could the same thing happen with drugs?

The author, linguist and political commentator John McWhorter thinks 
so. In a recent The New Republic blog post (http://bit.ly/eXcs2T and 
well worth your time), McWhorter, who is African American, argues 
that ending the war on drugs would improve lives in urban black 
communities and the country at large.

The crux of his persuasive argument is this: "If there were no way to 
sell drugs on the street at a markup, then young black men who drift 
into this route would instead have to get legal work. They would. 
Those insisting that they would not have about as much faith in human 
persistence and ingenuity as those who thought women past their 
five-year welfare cap would wind up freezing on sidewalk grates."

Making drugs available in clinics or by prescription would eliminate 
in a generation what McWhorter calls the "black problem" or 'black 
malaise" in America. There would be a new black (in Hartford we might 
infer Latino as well) community in which all able-bodied men had legal work.

In this community, "young black men, much less likely to wind up in 
prison cells or caskets, would be a constant presence -- and thus 
stay in the lives of their children. The black male community would 
no longer include a massive segment of underskilled, drug-addicted 
ex-cons churning in and out by the thousands year after year, and 
thus black boys growing up in these communities would not see this 
life as a norm. They would grow up to get jobs, period."

And these boys would not grow up with a bone-deep sense of the police 
- -- and thus whites -- as an enemy.

They would stay in school, which "is a prime reason the War on Drugs 
must end. It tears poor black communities to pieces. Not only by 
flooding them with police -- but by encouraging bright young black 
people to work the black market and lending it an air of heroism."

If you'd like the same message with a British accent, McWhorter 
directs us to England's former top drug official, Bob Ainsworth. He 
recently came out for replacing "our failed war on drugs with a 
strict system of legal regulation, to make the world a safer, 
healthier place, especially for our children. We must take the trade 
away from organized criminals and hand it to the control of doctors 
and pharmacists."

The illegal drug trade doesn't just cripple American cities. It 
bankrolls international terrorism and has turned parts of Mexico into 
war zones. The whole thing is crazy. What other crime has an 
organization of police officers, judges and prosecutors, such as Law 
Enforcement Against Prohibition, working for its repeal?

The failed war on drugs has cost Hartford and Connecticut a bloody 
fortune, and hasn't worked. Well, the city and the state now have 
extreme budget difficulties. Now is the time to try something 
different. In mid-March, Leadership Greater Hartford and others will 
sponsor a forum on this topic, which I will moderate, with the goal 
of really making a change in drug policy. I'll keep you posted on 
time and place.
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom