Posted on 12/04/2002 3:05:07 PM PST by MrLeRoy
MIDDLETOWN -- Peter Christ and Cliff Thornton are two men with very different backgrounds: Thornton was a substitute teacher in Hartfords schools, and Christ is a former police officer in western New York state. But both men have reached the same conclusion -- that the war on drugs is a massive failure that only deepens the national crisis of addiction and drug-related crime.
After 20 years on opposite sides of a war that has cost over $1 trillion in 30 years, with millions of casualties on both sides, the two men, and many more around the country, are pursuing campaigns to decriminalize illicit drugs.
"No matter how many (drug offenders) are locked up, the problem doesnt go away ..it gets worse," said Thornton, an educator for a Hartford-based drug law reform group. "The drug war is a colossal waste of resources (and) we must dismantle this monster."
Speaking to a large group of students at Wesleyan University Tuesday, Thornton and Christ explained their shared perception of the so-called drug war as a policy that not only fails to keep drugs off the streets and out of schools, but leads to the incarceration of large sectors of the population -- mostly poor people and minorities.
"The average drug user in the United States has a 40-hour per week job and is white," said Thornton, who cited reports from Amnesty International condemning U.S. drug policy for its violations of human and civil rights. "But the faces of prisoners are overwhelmingly black and brown."
African-American men make up only 3 percent of Connecticuts population, according to Thorntons group, Efficacy, but constitute 47 percent of all inmates in the states prisons and halfway houses.
Prisons themselves are "largely violent, drug-ridden places," he said, where inmates are not likely to get the treatment they need."
Although Thornton likened the "war on drugs" to "class and race warfare," Christ said he views the prohibition of drugs as a matter of practicality -- prohibition simply doesnt work.
Alcohol prohibition ended in the 1930s, "not because alcohol became benign ..but because we realized the policy (of prohibition) caused more problems than (alcohol did)," said Christ.
A founding member of the national group Law Enforcement Against Prohibition, Christ said he wants to see drugs legalized as a way to reduce drug-related crime and to regulate dangerous drugs.
Comparing drug prohibition to abortion and gambling laws, Christ said legalization will not cause an increase in the number of drug addicts.
"I want to regulate and control drugs in this country," said Christ. "You cant regulate the black market."
The forum was sponsored by the Wesleyan group Students for Sensible Drug Policy.
1) Drugs are illegal (as they should be).
2) Drugs kill.
Any questions?
And it would obviously make things easier for you.
And I am sure the same amount of people would believe the moon landing was faked and the world is flat, depending on how you ask the question.
Circular reasoning.
Drugs kill
Alcohol and nicotine kill far more. Should they be illegal? Obesity is becoming the leading health problem. Should McDonalds be sued out of existence?
Point?
Alcohol and nicotine kill far more.
Exactly. And that is because they are legal, not in spite of it.
Aspirin is legal (as it should be).
2) Drugs kill.
Aspirin kills.
Any questions?
Any answers?
EBUCK
That circular reasoning, i.e. supporting the WOD because drugs are illegal, is a logical fallacy.
And that is because they are legal, not in spite of it.
So you would support the return of alcohol prohibition?
The point of eliminating the "WOD" is not to encourage drug use. Stopping the "WOD" does not automatically mean legalization, actually. But you can stop making possession a mandatory prison-time serving criminal offense, and replace it with an exhorbitant fine, should you prefer. The "WOD" has given the government an excuse to trample on 4th Amendment rights, which I (as a NON-drug user) am concerned about. They can confiscate MY property on SUSPICION of drug crimes, with no requirement of prior conviction, and no compelling statute to return it upon my innocence being proven.
And just like Prohibition led to the rise of mob activity, WOD has led to gang activity (and, as a codicil, just like NYC's cigarette ban and huge tax hike has led to terrorist funding through cig smuggling). Many legal drugs are far more deadly and potent than ones currently illegal...
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