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                         DRUG LAWS KILL

                      A Libertarian Outlook

                   by Gerald Schneider, Ph.D.


     Bad as drug use can be, government laws to prevent drug use 
are worse!  More people die and are maimed because of drug laws 
than from the drugs themselves.  Drug laws can turn what may be a 
personal tragedy into a criminal catastrophe.  Both drug users 
and drug haters would be better off if drug use were 
decriminalized.
     The intellectual establishment already knows that drug laws 
do not work and are counterproductive.  Popular culture figures 
ranging from William F. Buckley, Jr. to _Bloom County_ cartoonist 
Berke Breathed have denounced drug laws openly.  But the public 
still misunderstands.
     Democratic and Republican candidates have exploited public 
apprehension about drugs to get votes.  These politicos promote 
the fiction that drug laws help and more drug laws would help 
more.  They all stand guilty of fostering public hysteria about 
drugs.
     In contrast, Ron Paul, the 1988 Libertarian Party Presiden-
tial candidate, opposes drug laws.  He is supported by a few 
brave politicians such as Baltimore Mayor Kurt L. Schmoke.  More 
politicians would join with them if they did not fear public 
censure.

                      Drug Laws Breed Crime

     Crime syndicates prosper from illegal drugs today just as 
bootleggers enriched themselves thanks to prohibition in the 
1930s.  High illegal drug prices attract and sustain criminals, 
while addicts murder and rob for money to buy drugs.
     In contrast, legalized drugs would sell at prices low enough 
to discourage professional criminal entrepreneurs.  Addicts would 
not have to steal to pay for drugs to support their habits.  For 
example, the legalized price of heroin necessary to maintain an 
addict would be about $1.50 per day.
     With the end of drug laws, murder would drop 70%, burglary 
60%.  Cities would be much safer.  Police would be freer to focus 
on real crimes.  Courts and jails would become uncrowded, 
ensuring swifter justice and less need, if any, to build new 
prisons.  Government officials--foreign and domestic--would no 
longer be corrupted by large sums of drug money.

                        Legal Drugs Safer

     History proves that regardless of health risks, drug users 
will be drug users.  Alcoholism is considered a disease, not a 
crime.  Why should this be less true for drug use?  Better to 
depend on education, counseling, and voluntary treatment to curb 
addiction than to turn addicts into criminals.
     Coping with living is tough enough for addicts.  Why saddle 
them with the added burden of finding safe and affordable drugs?  
Illegal drugs sold on the street are of unknown quality and, like 
"bathtub gin" during prohibition, can harm and kill users.  Legal 
drugs would be sold over the counter in drug stores where safety 
and cost could be judged.
     Children especially need to be protected from bad drugs.  
Drug vending should not be left to strangers in school yards and 
on playgrounds.  Legalized drugs would put most street drug 
peddlers out of business.  Legal drugs obtained by children would 
at least be safer, even if these drugs are considered undesirable 
by parents.

                        A Double Standard

     For what it is worth, legal drugs--alcohol and nicotine (in 
cigarettes)--kill thousands more people than illegal drugs do.  
For example, in 1984 (the latest year for which complete data is 
available), illegal drugs killed 3,500 people.  In that same 
year, there were 150,000 alcohol-related deaths and 350,000 
tobacco-related deaths!
     Beware of the contrived "war on drugs."  Self destruction 
through drug abuse of any kind should be discouraged by 
responsible people.  But keeping drugs illegal does not help, 
and, as facts show, only makes matters worse.

     Reprinted from THE WHEATON NEWS of Wheaton, Maryland, May 
12, 1988. For a one year subscription to Mr. Schneider's biweekly 
"Libertarian Outlook" column, send $15 to: Gerald Schneider, 8750 
Georgia Ave., Suite 1410-B, Silver Spring, MD 20910.  Copyright 
1988 Gerald Schneider, Ph.D.

(This is the text of one of a series of eight topical Libertarian 
outreach leaflets produced by the Libertarian Party of Skagit 
County, WA.  The leaflets have a panel with National LP member-
ship information, with a space for other LP groups to stamp their 
own address and phone number.  Samples and a bulk price list/ 
order form are available from: Libertarian Party of Skagit 
County, P.O. Box 512, Anacortes, WA 98221.)