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Newsgroups: talk.politics.drugs
From: jerry@teetot.acusd.edu (Jerry Stratton)
Subject: The Day After Legalization
Message-ID: <1993Sep2.181629.7051@teetot.acusd.edu>
Date: Thu, 2 Sep 93 18:16:29 GMT
*Hope for the Future*
It is clear that most of the serious problems the public associates with
illegal drug use are, in reality, caused directly or indirectly by drug
prohibition.
Let's assume the war on drugs is given up as the misguided enterprise it
is. What will happen? The day after legalization goes into effect, the
streets of America will be safer. The drug dealers will be gone. The
shoot-outs between drug dealers will end. Innocent bystanders will not
be murdered anymore. Hundreds of thousands of drug "addicts" will no
longer roam the streets, shoplifting, mugging, breaking into homes in
the middle of the night to steal, and dealing violently with those who
happen to wake up. One year after prohibition is repealed, 1,600
innocent people who would otherwise have been dead at the hands of drug
criminals will be alive.
Within days of prohibition repeal, thousands of judges, prosecutors, and
police will be free to catch, try, and imprison violent career criminals
-- criminals who commit 50 to 100 serious crimes, including robbery,
rape, and murder, per year when on the loose. For the first time in
years, our overcrowded prisons will have room for them. Ultimately,
repeal of prohibition will open 75,000 jail cells.
The day after repeal, organized crime will get a big pay cut -- $80
billion a year.
How about those slick young drug dealers who are the new role models for
the youth of the inner cities, with their designer clothes and Mercedes
convertibles, always wearing a broad, smug smile that says crime pays?
They snicker at the honest kids going to school or to work at the
minimum wage. The day after repeal, the honest kids will have the last
laugh. The dealers will be out of a job, unemployed.
The day after repeal, real drug education can begin and, for the first
time in history, it can be honest. No more need to prop up the failed
war on drugs.
The year before repeal, 500,000 Americans will have died from illnesses
related to overeating and lack of exercise, 390,000 from smoking, and
150,000 from drinking alcohol. About 3,000 will have died from cocaine,
heroin, and marijuana combined, with many of those deaths the result of
the lack of quality control in the black market. The day after repeal,
cocaine, heroin, and marijuana will, bay and large, do no harm to those
who choose not to consume them. In contrast, the day before prohibition
repeal, all Americans, whether or not they choose to use illegal drugs,
will be forced to endure the violence, street crime, erosion of civil
liberties, corruption, and social and economic decay caused by the war
on drugs.
("Thinking About Drug Legalization", James Ostrowski, from _The Crisis
in Drug Prohibition_, edited by David Boaz)
Jerry Stratton
jerry@teetot.acusd.edu
------
"This two-legged prima-donna told all the other fauna that the starring
role was his and his alone. And when the others asked him why, he just
pointed at the sky, and said that God had told him on the phone."
-- Mark Graham, "The Big Band Theory"