Pubdate: Thu, 21 Jun 2018 Source: Wall Street Journal (US) Copyright: 2018 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. Contact: http://www.wsj.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/487 Author: James Liddell PROHIBITIONISTS NEVER LEARN The authors suffer from the same confirmation bias and first-order thinking that begot the demonstrably unsuccessful war on drugs and has sustained it, to tragic effect, for nearly 50 years. Despite enormous expense and countless American lives lost to street violence and incarceration, access to and abuse of marijuana and other drugs remains as prevalent as ever. Why, then, do intelligent people refuse to accept that the goals of the antidrug crusade haven't been, and cannot be, achieved by prohibition? The authors' parade of horribles is uncompelling when compared with the actual devastation wrought by the war on drugs. Do Messrs. Kennedy and Sabet really prefer the gangs that have defiled neighborhoods and blighted inner cities, and the drug cartels that have terrorized whole countries, to a few marijuana dispensaries engaging in unsavory business practices? And what about the trade-off between a small uptick in marijuana-related traffic fatalities on the one hand, and tens of thousands of murders committed by drug pushers and traffickers, enriched and enabled by America's misbegotten drug policies, on the other? Should the profits of the drug trade flow to murderers and narco-terrorists, or to the coffers of state and federal governments? In their hubris, American policy makers have selected the wrong answer to each of these questions. Fortunately, we seem to be at an inflection point, with more and more Americans opening their eyes to the futility of marijuana prohibition and its appalling unintended consequences. It's time for prohibitionists to face the fact that all we have to show for the war on drugs is collateral damage. It's past time to end it. James Liddell Washington