Pubdate: Wed, 21 Feb 2001 Source: Andalusia Star-News (AL) Copyright: 2001 The Andalusia Star-News Contact: 207 Dunson Street, Andalusia, Alabama 36420 Website: http://www.andalusiastarnews.com/ Author: Michael Willard Related: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v01/n294/a02.html Bookmark: Methamphetamine http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm METH ISN'T NATION'S ONLY PROBLEM Thanks to a news series published in The Andalusia Star-News for the past week, residents throughout Covington County had the opportunity to learn about the horrors that are associated with methamphetamine addiction, a steadily increasing problem not only in this county but throughout the nation. From my own experience interviewing former meth addicts and meth producers during the past week, I came to realize that the stimulant is a major problem this nation faces. Speaking with these people I caught a brief glimpse into the lifestyle that surrounds constant meth use, and it wasn't a pretty picture. Between the toxicity of the chemicals used to produce the substance and the health problems, such as loss of hair, teeth and body weight, that are associated with regular use, it quickly became clear that methamphetamine really is pure poison. Judging from my recent experiences throughout the Covington County community, readers of the Star-News enjoyed the series and the information it provide, as much as I, both writing and researching, have enjoyed composing each piece. Steadily, the Covington County community is learning that methamphetamine is a real problem in this area, if they didn't already know that fact. And while few are arguing that meth users lead lives of crime that can result in broken families and poor health, there are still other, more severe drug problems that face the county and the nation. As America continues its war on drugs, which in my opinion is well-intentioned, but has resulted in one of the greatest boondoggles in the nation's brief history, with federal, state and local governments pouring countless taxpayer dollars into a battle it has no hopes of winning, one of the nation's leading killers is running rampant on the streets. Annually, 430,700 Americans die as a result of diseases caused by smoking tobacco, according to the American Lung Association. Tobacco use, not just smoking, leads to the death of one in every five Americans, the American Cancer Society reports. Now I believe that every person in America has the right to choose what they want to do with their lives, whether it be use methamphetamine, snort cocaine, pick up rattlesnakes or kill themselves via regular nicotine injections. However, when that person's activity infringes on my rights, or the services I might receive, I find that contempt and anger often creep into my perspective. Smoking costs the United States about $97.2 billion each year in health care costs and lost productivity, the ALA reports. It is responsible for 87 percent of lung cancer and causes most cases of emphysema and chronic bronchitis in the nation, and that's just for the smokers themselves. The damage second-hand smoke causes non-smokers is immeasurable. In my mind that $97 billion is a heck of a lot of money that could be spent on a lot of better things, i.e. education, military, national parks, highways, etc. So when I learn that all my tax money is going toward paying the health expenses of a fool who spent his entire life smoking, I can't help but wonder, where is the tobacco task force? Why is something that is so dangerous, according to all medical professionals, sold over the counter to anyone over the age of 18? The answer is simple and it relates very much to the reason drugs are still present in our culture after more than two decades of "War on Drugs." Too many people are making too much money off tobacco for America to enforce any prohibition. Not only are the big business tobacco companies, such as R.J Reynolds and Phillip Morris, living high off the hog thanks to nicotine addiction, but the boys who seem to be against the tobacco use the most are getting rich off of it, too. Do you think health care facilities or hospitals are unhappy about all the money they are getting paid to treat tobacco-related diseases? Heck no. State and federal governments are also cleaning up thanks to mountains of money collected through tobacco taxes, not to mention the settlements they have recently started to receive from tobacco companies. So, while Joe Camel and the Marlboro Man keep legally toking the smoke until they choke and countless teens take up the habit each year, how can we as a nation in good conscience attack drug users for their own personal decision? Until we solve one of the nation's worst problems, how can we stop a bunch of fools from boiling together Drano, matches and ephedrine together in their basement and snorting it? - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk