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Drug WarRant

Saturday, September 10, 2005

It starts with a sniffle...

... then your head get gets stuffed up. You start coughing -- you know, that racking cough that makes you sore. Every time you try to lay down, your head feels worse.

You need sleep.

So you go to the all-night convenience store to get that magical bottle of relief. You're already thinking about how well it works. How you even almost need to sit on the edge of the bed when you drink that little plastic cup because it'll put you to sleep so fast. And you're hacking and sniffling on the way to the convenience store, but it's all right, because you can almost taste the delicious night of sleep.

But...

The convenience store doesn't sell it anymore. You have to go to a pharmacy (tomorrow), wait in line with your I.D., put your name in the computer, have it check to make sure you haven't already purchased some this month, and then, you'll be able to purchase that nighttime, sniffling, sneezing, coughing, aching, stuffy head, fever, sleep better to feel better medicine.

But not tonight.

Tonight, you're just screwed.

Link

WASHINGTON, Sept 9 (Reuters) - The U.S. Senate moved on Friday to stop the proliferation of illicit methamphetamine labs by limiting sales of common cold medicines containing pseudoephedrine, a primary ingredient in the illegal drug.

The Senate approved the measure as an amendment to an appropriations bill funding law enforcement activities as well as a range of federal agencies. That bill is expected to be approved next week.

The amendment, sponsored by Sen. Jim Talent, a Missouri Republican, and Sen. Dianne Feinstein, a California Democrat, would move cold medicines containing pseudoephedrine, such as Sudafed, NyQuil, and Tylenol Cold, behind pharmacy counters and limit how much one person can buy to 7.5 grams a month, or about 250 tablets of 30 milligram each.[...]

Under the amendment, customers will be required to show a photo identification and sign a log. The bill envisages a computer tracking system to stop people from buying pills at multiple stores.

I'm sure this will stop the meth addicts. They'll just stop doing drugs and become productive members of society. They won't import the stuff, or find alternate means, or create worse drugs, or anything...

[See also Libby's post at Last One Speaks.]

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Friday, September 9, 2005

Quote of the day

Link
With police officers and federal law enforcement agents ratcheting up the pressure on [New Orleans] residents to leave, the holdouts worry that it is just a matter of time before they are forced out.

Ms. Harris said she did not want to leave. "I haven't even run out of weed yet," she said.

Hat tip to Jeffrey


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Thursday, September 8, 2005

Understanding 'need' for treatment

Health and Human Services announced today the results of the 2004 National Survey on Drug Use and Health

I'm sure that there will be a number of interesting bits of data in this year's results that I'll talk about later, but there's one general point that I wanted to address today: the "need" for treatment.

I've had concerns for some time about the definitions for abuse and dependence that are used when dealing with illicit drugs and alcohol. For example, the survey shows that 17.6 of those who used marijuana in the past year are classified as abusers or dependent, while that's true of only 11.9% of those who used alcohol. Of course, in actuality, marijuana causes far less (and far milder) dependence than alcohol, but because "abuse" also includes definitions that are affected by the legal status, that jacks up the percentages for marijuana abuse.

The next step taken by the government study is to classify everyone in the "abuse" or "dependent" categories as "needing treatment." They give no reason for this arbitrary judgment. And it's pretty offensive, in my view.

Let's take a look at a drug that isn't covered by the survey: tobacco. Many Americans are dependent on cigarettes, and yet it would be odd to consider them all as needing treatment. They may need to decide to quit (and then have no problem doing so), or they may need to get some help quitting (such as a patch or a support group). But to say that merely because they are dependent, they are in need of treatment, sounds like a definition that has been written by treatment professionals to increase their business.

Back to illicit drugs and alcohol, if you take a look at the study's own numbers, you see how preposterous the designations are. Of those supposedly needing treatment and not getting it...

According to the study, 23.48 million people (or 9.8% of the American population over 12 years old) needed treatment. Wow! What a cash opportunity for the treatment industry. And that's right, of the 21.1 million who supposedly needed treatment and didn't get it, only 1.2 million people actually felt that they needed treatment. Maybe 20 million people are delusional. But I doubt it.

The entire concept of "treatment" (and the definitions of those who need it) in drug policy data, needs to be re-examined from the ground up (and not by those who benefit from it). The mere fact that a study can claim that roughly 1 in 10 Americans need treatment is a strong warning sign that the data and/or assumptions are seriously flawed.

9:13:38 PM |  | Related  | permalink | comment []



Don't trot out that tired 'For the Children' argument anymore, Part 2

Via NORML

London, United Kingdom: The downgrading of cannabis to a non-arrestable offense has not been associated with an increase in adolescents' use of the drug, according to survey data published by the United Kingdom's Department of Health.

The Department found that the number of young people who admitted having consumed cannabis in the past year fell from 13 percent to 11 percent in 2004 - the first reported dip in four years.

In January of 2004, Britain downgraded marijuana from a Class B to a Class C scheduled drug. Under this reclassification, individuals found in possession of personal use amounts of marijuana are cautioned by police, but, in general, are no longer arrested. (Police do retain the discretion to make an arrest under special "aggravated" circumstances, such as if marijuana is smoked on school grounds.)

Preliminary data published last year by the British Home Office indicated that far fewer Britons have been arrested for minor marijuana offenses since the drug's reclassification.



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Your horoscope

Virgo: August 23 - September 22
Despite your claims of historical importance and the need to remember America's fallen heroes, the authorities continue to refuse to grant you the permits required by your avid group of drug-war re-enactors.

From The Onion

Ah, how I look forward to the day when we have drug war re-enactments. Bringing out those museum-piece battering rams, "patting down" people on the street, and pretending to search passing cars...

12:32:14 AM |  | Related  | permalink | comment []



DEA re-writes history

This has been reported widely already while I was gone (See Grits, and The Agitator (with not one, but two links to rebuttals), and Hit and Run.)

However, it bears repeating here.

The DEA, at their new JustThinkTwice website, is actually claiming that alcohol prohibition was a success!

A word about prohibition: lots of you hear the argument that alcohol prohibition failed---so why are drugs still illegal? Prohibition did work. Alcohol consumption was reduced by almost 60% and incidents of liver cirrhosis and deaths from this disease dropped dramatically (Scientific American, 1996, by David Musto). Today, alcohol consumption is over three times greater than during the Prohibition years. Alcohol use is legal, except for kids under 21, and it causes major problems, especially in drunk driving accidents.
Yes, the DEA is longing for the days when alcohol was illegal. How moronic!

Interestingly, at one of the other sites, a commenter suggested that we are being unfairly critical of the DEA -- that it could be interpreted that they were just claiming the simple fact that there was a reduction in use, not that prohibition in its entirety (and with all its attendant problems) was a success.

But that, of course, is nonsense. You can't ignore the myriad disasters of prohibition and just claim success in a numbers game of use. Particularly when you're using that to justify continued prohibition in another area.

Just for the sake of argument, however, let's take a moment and ignore all the violence, corruption, subsidization of criminal elements, uncontrolled dangerous/poisonous substances, collateral damage, increased exposure to youth, etc., etc.

Even if you ignore all that, the DEA's argument is specious.

First, because they're picking and choosing their numbers. If you read the Agitator's links, you'll see just how much they're fudging (read "lying").

Second, because a numbers game of "use" is useless. When prohibitionists tout the importance of, and supposed reason for, prohibition, they usually talk about the dangers and destruction caused by drugs/drug addicts. But when they use the numbers game, they're actually talking about all drug use regardless of abuse/danger.

In fact, prohibition tends to only reduce casual, non-problematic use -- those who prefer to follow the law (even if they disagree with it) and have only a mild interest in using the particular substance. Those who are likely to abuse drugs (or in the case of the earlier prohibition, alcohol) will tend to do so whether it is legal or illegal.

So, even a strong prohibition-fueled reduction in use has insignificant value in terms of actually helping those who need it, or reducing abuse.

Now, take that insignificant value and add back in all the negatives caused by prohibition and, whether it's attacking alcohol or drugs, you have an inept and cataclysmic policy that destroys everything it touches.

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Wednesday, September 7, 2005

Don't trot out that tired 'For the Children' argument anymore

Link
WASHINGTON, Sept. 6 (UPI) -- Teens in the handful of states allowing medical marijuana are no more likely to use the drug than those in other states, according to a study released Tuesday.

We already knew this, but it's nice to have another study confirming it.

Of course, that doesn't stop the ONDCP from spouting gibberish.

"Misleading messages that harmful substances are somehow 'good for them' send teens exactly the wrong message," [ONDCP's Tom] Riley said. His statement did not directly address the study's state-by-state findings.
Uh, Tom... Are you paying any attention to the words coming out of your mouth in the context of this story?

Let's see... So the study says that the "message" of medical marijuana doesn't cause teens to use marijuana, yet you still say it is somehow a "wrong" message for them. What does it do? Make them think bad thoughts? Oh, I get it! It's a wrong message because it makes teens realize that the government's been lying to them, and they might grow up to become politically active, and cause people like Tom Riley to become unemployed. Ah, yes. A dangerous message indeed.

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Tuesday, September 6, 2005

Zero Tolerance

So here's the outline:

  • 14-year veteran New York Firefighter spends day after day at ground zero pulling out pieces of people -- a face, a scalp with hair, an arm...
  • Nightmares plague him and he turns to drugs
  • Caught once in a random drug test, he's slated to be fired, losing his pension
This is part of the department's zero tolerance policy, which doesn't allow for such silly little niceties such as, oh, I don't know... maybe helping a brave firefighter who's been traumatized by a terrorist attack?

Zero tolerance works, officials say, because it is a bracing deterrent to those who do not take the prohibition seriously.
That's such a load of crap.

Zero tolerance, whether it's part of this move to fire a firefighter or whether it's in our schools, is actually a policy that says that it's OK to toss away the lives of individuals (regardless of the situation) in the pursuit of the "goal" of prohibition.

Zero tolerance also says that we, as a society, are not capable of, or willing to use judgement in evaluating situations.

It's ugly.

It's also a betrayal of the entire concept of justice.

Justice: the quality of being just or fair
Just: 1: used especially of what is legally or ethically right or proper or fitting;... 2: implying justice dictated by reason, conscience, and a natural sense of what is fair to all

Unfortunately, the Zero Tolerance philosophy is ubiquitous. For example:

  • Drug Testing is a form of Zero Tolerance. It says that we do not need to evaluate whether an employee is able to do their job. We'll let it all ride on an often irrelevant drug test.
  • Zero Tolerance drugged driving laws have nothing to do with safety
  • Mandatory minimums in court are also a form of zero tolerance, leaving no room for evaluating individual circumstances
  • The HEA financial aid drug provisions are a form of zero tolerance

There are plenty of other examples.

Zero Tolerance: The Policy Choice for those with Zero Intelligence

9:36:44 PM |  | Related  | permalink | comment []



I'm back...

It was a wonderful and refreshing extended weekend, brought down only by the depressing news that continued to break through from New Orleans.

It was interesting to discover that, with all the stranded and starving people, they found time to make a jail and fill it, in part, with "addicts possessing small amounts of drugs... One man had mooned a state police car on patrol. "

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