-Caveat Lector-

Dave Hartley
http://www.Asheville-Computer.com
http://www.ioa.com/~davehart



10/4/99 -- 3:56 PM

            New Mexico governor brings pro-narcotics
                        message to Washington


        WASHINGTON (AP) - Not only has the war on drugs been a
multibillion-dollar  failure, but it has unjustifiably thrown thousands of
people in
prison while lying  about the dangers of marijuana, New Mexico's governor
said Monday.

        Gov. Gary Johnson, a Republican, kicked off a visit to the nation's
capital by  meeting with leaders of a college student group that shares his
goal of drug legalization. Johnson is the country's highest-ranking elected
official to advocate legalizing such drugs as cocaine, heroin and marijuana.

        After swimming two miles and jogging five miles for his morning
workout, then bounding up four flights of stairs to avoid a sluggish
elevator at
George  Washington University, Johnson told the students that drugs are a
bad choice,  but people should be allowed to decide for themselves whether
to
make it.

        ``I hate to say it, but the majority of people who use drugs use
them
        responsibly,'' Johnson told members of Students for a Sensible Drug
Policy.
        ``They choose when to do it. They do them at home. It's not a
financial  burden.''

White House drug policy director Barry McCaffrey and other officials
excoriated Johnson last week after he became the first governor to
support drug  legalization.

        ``His pro-drug message runs in the face of all the hard work of
millions of parents, teachers, health professionals, community leaders,
coaches
and clergy who are working so hard to stem drug use,'' McCaffrey said
Friday.

        Johnson found a friendlier audience in the students.

        ``Students are experts on drug use,'' said Kris Lotlikar, a leader
of the group.
        ``We're the children that this war was supposed to protect. But I
have yet to talk to any student who came from a drug-free high school.
To me, that's a failed  policy.''

        The students said they did not want to be labeled drug users just
because they support legalization.

        ``We aren't a group of dope-smoking hippies,'' said David Epstein,
a member of the group from American University.

        As the students sipped bottled water, Johnson told them of his drug
use as a  young man and his decision years ago to forgo not only drugs but
alcohol and even Coca-Cola in favor of training for triathlons.

        ``I was somebody who smoked marijuana in college. I didn't
experiment with marijuana, I smoked it,'' Johnson said. ``I made a bad
choice, but
even then it wasn't a choice that I felt should have landed me in jail.''

        Johnson said he supports legalization of drugs, but under strict
control of sales and use and with significant taxation. Under a legalization
scheme,
Johnson said, drugs such as marijuana, heroin and cocaine should not be
available
to anyone under 21, public drug use should be banned and penalties should be
increased for crimes such as driving under the influence.

        ``There are going to be new problems under legalization,'' Johnson
said. ``But I  submit to you they are going to be about half of what they
are
today under the prohibition model.''

        Current drug policy focuses too heavily on imprisoning people while
allowing illegal drug cartels to rake in billions of dollars, Johnson said.
Current anti-drug education efforts such as the government's ``this is your
brain on
drugs''  television commercials amount to lies, he said.

        ``You're brought up learning that drugs make you crazy,'' Johnson
said. ``Then you do marijuana for the first time, and it's not so bad. It's
kind
of cool. That's when kids find out it's been a lie.''

        Darren White, who oversees New Mexico's state police as head of the
        Department of Public Safety, told the students he is unwilling to
support drug legalization but agreed with Johnson that current anti-drug
efforts
are misguided.

        ``We aren't winning the drug war. I can tell you because I'm
fighting on the front lines every day,'' White said. ``I call it a skirmish,
because
that's the kind of resources I'm getting to fight it. ... As a nation, we're
not
willing to give up the civil liberties necessary to win the drug war.''

        Copyright 1999 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material
may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.


*** NOTICE: In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material
is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest
in receiving the included information for research and educational
purposes. ***

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