Meth and crack are dangerous both to the user and to people around them. I was once attacked in a company breakroom by a crack user. Meth is the same way. Irrational unfounded anger leads to situations like this. If it only hurt the user then maybe I'd agree to legalising it but its dangerous to everybody.
I was attacked by a drunk man once. If it only hurt the user then maybe I'd agree to it staying legal, but it's dangerous for everybody.
Probably it has to do with the fact that a crack head and meth head look like crack heads and meth heads. Long-time users have a very visible, almost mutilating look to them -- meth mouth, needle marks all up and down their body, behave like jittery schizophrenics. And it happens almost all regular users.Right. There are many things that are dangerous to the user and people around them, including alcohol.
Why, specifically, meth and crack?
Family? Friends? Employers? Society in general?
Not at a national level, but having medics in certain nightclubs may be demanded by the local municipal authorities as a pre-condition for granting the venue a licence to operatre, along with other harm-reduction measures like having specific chill-out areas for clubbers to take breaks in. It is, however, a national legal requirement for venues to provide free water unconditionally. On top of that, the regulation of the security industry has effectively eliminated the previous issues of criminal and/or un-trained staff. These are all measures that were borne out of the negative experiences of the late-1980s/early-1990s, when firstly the main cause of death via heatstroke was not understood.I'd like to examine this idea of how much 'regulation' is required in a 'legalized' drug environment. Its been proposed here, that some drugs should be legalized, and others not. Or conversely that all drugs be legalized, but a number of steps be taken to mitigate certain drugs - a different kind of regulation, if you will.
The first scenario I'd like to explore, is the concept of using MDMA in a 'medically supervised' environment - ie, at a nightclub or similar facility, with some sort of medic/assistant on hand. It was pointed out to me that in some venues in the UK, this already happens. I presume in these cases, the nightclubs in question have found it expedient to fund this - through reduced security incidents, reduced insurance premiums, reduced legal issues, reduced bad publicity. I am making the assumption that the government is not involved in this supervision.
Horse riding is the most well-known example of an activity that is reckoned to be more dangerous than MDMA use. Skiing is a much greater risk.Pretend for a moment, that the government DOES decide to fund medical supervision in venues where drugs are commonly used. If we assume that say... 1:1000 incidents of MDMA use requires a medical intervention of some kind. Are there any other recreational activities with similar risk rates where the government supplies supervision? Downhill skiing? Skateboard/bmx parks? Community team full-contact sports such as rugby or lacrosse? I can't think of any.
Everyone?Think about sex-education: almost everyone understands that abstinence-only education does not work, and its actually more harmful
I was attacked by a drunk man once. If it only hurt the user then maybe I'd agree to it staying legal, but it's dangerous for everybody.
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Abstinence-only approaches to recreational drug usage don't work either, so the focus should be on harm reduction. People end up in the hospital all the time from heroin usage not because they overdose, but they blow an air bubble into their veins. People seriously injure or kill themselves because they don't have access to information which could have potentially avoided the situation.
Okay, I thought I was liberal but I'm having trouble with the idea of "shooting up" classes in school or college.
I agree, that kind of information probably shouldn't be taught in schools (though it probably wouldn't be inappropriate in a college setting).
Eventually though, many users are hard drugs find themselves asking questions like whether you can clean a used needle, whether you'll go to prison for possession of you call an ambulance to report a drug overdose, how certain drugs interacts with prescribed medication like birth control or blood thinners, etc.
What possible advantage do people have not knowing the right answers to those questions? I can't think of any. I think education is a better harm-reduction strategy than learning by trial and error.
Right. There are many things that are dangerous to the user and people around them, including alcohol.
Why, specifically, meth and crack?
Abstinence-only approaches to recreational drug usage don't work either, so the focus should be on harm reduction. People end up in the hospital all the time from heroin usage not because they overdose, but they blow an air bubble into their veins. People seriously injure or kill themselves because they don't have access to information which could have potentially avoided the situation.
I'm a little squeamish to think that these topics should be taught in general population classes. I don't know what the percentile is of hard drug users. Lets say its something around 10% - hopefully less - much less - than that. I don't think that a 10% population means that we need to actively TEACH something. Pamphlets, outreach, readily available information at your local shooting gallery / disease prevention unit - absolutely.
To draw an analogy - I think as part of sex ed, it is relevant to demonstrate how to use a condom, and to discuss how a condom should be used to protect against pregnancy & disease. Do we need also to discuss the safe way to engage in say S&M play? Some of the more extreme forms of S&M play? Show Bob Flanagan's film 'Sick' as a documentary to a broad student population?
It is assumed (at least I assume) that everyone suggesting legalization isn't HOPING that more people start using drugs - particularly not the known devastating/debilitating drugs. In a course, a mention of 'if you are using an injectable drug, or are thinking about using an injectable drug, then download a copy of flyer 'x' from website 'y'' really should suffice.
I dunno, they worked for me. Don't you think if we started teaching safe drug use then the whole element of 'scary' that you say keeps people away from heroin and crack and the like might be somewhat diluted?
"One bad thing deserves another" is not a sound argument for legalizing methampetamines and crack cocaine.
I singled out meth and crack as the worst drugs because there seem to be no problem-free casual users.
I dunno, they worked for me. Don't you think if we started teaching safe drug use then the whole element of 'scary' that you say keeps people away from heroin and crack and the like might be somewhat diluted?
It is important drug education is based on evidence about what works and what clearly does not work. Many drug education programmes have been evaluated in this country, other European countries and America. Collectively they show that:
-The impact of drug education on drug using behaviour has been shown to be limited. Drug education alone is unlikely to prevent young people from ever experimenting with drugs.
-‘Just Say No’ and ‘shock/ scare’ approaches are likely to be ineffective and may even be counterproductive.
-Good quality drug education can impact on changes in specific drug using patterns and reduce the use of drugs and associated problems for young people.
-Drug education can contribute towards decreased harm and increased safety for young people, their families and communities. Drug education has been part of effective needle exchange schemes, ‘safer dancing’ initiatives and ‘drink-driving’. However, the impact of more general, and particularly school-based, drug education on reducing drug-related harm (rather than whether or not people have ever used drugs) has not been measured in any studies.
http://www.drugscope-dworld.org.uk/wip/24/teachers.htmAccurate drug information is an important part of drug education. In the past young people have not always been given accurate information. There has sometimes been a tendency for teachers, and other adults, to exaggerate the dangers of certain drugs, often in an attempt to put young people off drug use; what one commentator has termed 'prophylactic lies'. Evaluations of drug education programmes emonstrate that 'shock/ scare' approaches do not generally prevent young people from experimenting with drugs. Young people find out, through their own drug using experiences and from talking to their peers, that they have not been told the complete truth. Adults then lose credibility as sources of drug information.