No, because most people recognize that in any strategy to deal with a problem—and I believe this is a public health problem because it creates morbidity and death—there is no one silver bullet. You have to look at a series of things that are going to deal with the issue. Prevention alone will not do it.
I'm a physician, and I can tell you that there is absolutely no disease or public health illness that can be cured by prevention alone. There are many that can't. So you have to deal with looking at prevention as one of the obvious core elements of the strategy, but then you have to move on to areas in which they are unable to do prevention, and you have to then deal with enforcement.
I think one has to look at the issue of addiction as one of these things. You create an awareness of addiction, you create ways of preventing addiction, but when people are addicted you have to actually deal with the issue as a public health issue. And those who exploit people who are addicted, such as criminal elements who sell drugs and people who have international cartels that sell drugs, have to have enforcement attached to them.
There is no one bullet in any sort of strategy. It has to be a series of things that you use. This is only one of them.