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Submitting a Letter to the Editor To send this article as a letter to the editor for publication in your local newspaper, please follow these simple instructions: 1) Depress and hold the left button of your mouse down while sliding the cursor over all the text on this page below the long, white horizontal line. Release the mouse button. 2) Depress and hold down the Control <CTRL> Key while tapping the "c" key. Release the Control Key. This copies the text into the Windows clipboard. 3) Open your favorite e-mail program, and move the cursor into the place where you would normally begin to type the body of a new e-mail message. 4) Depress and hold down the Control <CTRL> Key while tapping the "v" key. Release the Control Key. This pastes the text into e-mail window from the Windows clipboard. 5) Enter your newspaper's name in place of [my newspaper]. 6) Enter your name, address, phone number and e-mail address where indicated, in place of the items in brackets. (These will not be published.) 7) Enter your name and city at the bottom of the letter where indicated. (These will be published.) 8) Enter the e-mail address, such as letters@mynewspaper.com, of your local paper's online "letters to the editor" page of the opinion section. 9) Enter "Letter to the Editor request" as the subject of your message. 10) Send it off. 11) Be prepared for a phone call from your newspaper asking you to confirm that you were indeed the person who submitted the request for publication. 12) Check to see that your letter was published. If you subscribe to the paper, clip out the article and save it. If you only read it online, then be sure to print it out for your own records or archives. Dear Editor, I would respectfully like to submit the following as a "letter to the editor" to be published in
the opinion section of the [my newspaper]. Thank you very much for your consideration. ********************************** Illicit Drug Trade Finances Terrorism The use of any illicit drug, even in casual or small amounts, and even
the use of those drugs not considered to be "hard drugs", is not just
a personal matter, as is often argued by users. It is a serious mistake to
consider that such personal drug use (or abuse), even in the privacy of one's own home, is
protected under the "freedom of speech" clause of the First Amendment
to the U.S. Constitution. In addition to creating an increased potential
of risk to an individual's physical and mental health, the use of illicit drugs
has been proven time and again to have serious consequences that often violate
the rights of others to be "secure in their persons" as guaranteed by
the Fourth Amendment. Consider the following: With heroin's street value currently at well over 12 times its weight in gold, it is by far the most profitable commodity on today's international markets. The drug trade produces so much cash that traffickers are finding it increasingly difficult to smuggle it out of the country in order to pay their suppliers. So great is the drain on our country's economy that the U.S. Customs Service is able to seize amounts in excess of $1.2 million each day. Profits alone from sales in the U.S. are estimated to measure in the billions of dollars annually. Between 1997 to 2000, U.S. Customs conducted more than 12,000 financial investigations worldwide — both drug and non drug-related, leading to the seizure by world governments of almost $1.1 trillion in assets. Farmers around the world grow crops that provide the raw materials for illicit drugs simply because they can hardly afford not to. Where government sanctions against growing are not effective, the value of these crops to farmers is far greater than the value of food crops such as rice, soybeans, corn, and wheat. In essence, these farmers are being subsidized by the drug users in this country and around the world, and this subsidy by the black market drug trade is so powerful that even governments find it extremely difficult to compete. With their purchases of If you know a user or someone who knows a user, please ask them to consider the greater consequences of their actions before they score their next hit. For more information, please browse to http://www.NewsOnDemand.org. Sincerely, [my name] [my city] |