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Letter: Drug-dependent people respond better to compassion than punishment

| Eleven Foot Pole Michael Moore (left) meets Claudio Domenicali, CEO of the Italian motorcycle maker Ducati, as he looks for ideas to make America better, in his latest op-ed documentary, "Where to Invade Next."

Kathy Morris, former coordinator of the Davis County drug court, and Chris Allred, Weber County attorney, appear to want to punish people who use drugs and who have been arrested for drug-related crimes.

It might behoove them and the general public to read “Chasing the Scream: The First and Last Days of the War on Drugs,” and to watch Michael Moore’s movie, “Where to Invade Next.” What author Johann Hari discovered is that drug-dependent people respond more positively to understanding, compassion and emotional connectedness than they do to punishment. And they are punished in a variety of ways.

While this does not guarantee that a person will stop using drugs, he found that there is a greater chance that he/she will. One way to promote understanding is to legalize or at least decriminalize drugs. This conclusion did not come easy for me, but after years of seeing the damage that the war on drugs has done, it is the only sensible conclusion. The U.S. can learn a lot from other countries where drugs have been decriminalized; Portugal, for one, “where HIV infections and drug-related deaths have decreased.”

America, wake up.

Bella Martinez, Salt Lake City