Advertisement

Fooling all the people all the time

Share

Re “The real drug war,” editorial, Nov. 10

Funding drug treatment for Americans, rather than guns for Mexico, is good, provided it is focused. The drug war has failed because it defines any use of an illegal drug as abuse in need of treatment, forced if necessary. We must not force treatment on users who don’t want it.

Casual users don’t need it; hard-core users won’t respond to it unless they are tired of their life with drugs.

The drug war has been building for almost 100 years. It began with the well-intentioned, albeit flawed, logic of prohibitionists such as Richmond Pearson Hobson and Harry J. Anslinger to punish anyone who used or sold drugs they didn’t like. As the situation deteriorated, Nelson Rockefeller, Richard Nixon and then Ronald Reagan escalated the war. Academics predicted failure but were ignored.

Advertisement

If we choose to escalate the drug war yet again, Abraham Lincoln will have been proved wrong: It really is possible to fool all the people all the time.

John Chase

Palm Harbor, Fla.

Advertisement