Pubdate: Tue, 27 Mar 2001 Source: Cavalier Daily (VA Edu) Copyright: 2001 The Cavalier Daily, Inc. Contact: PO Box 400703, Charlottesville, VA 22904-4703 Fax: (804) 924-7290 Feedback: http://www.cavalierdaily.com/contact/edit.asp Website: http://www.cavalierdaily.com/ Author: Alice C. Ours Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v01/n548/a05.html DRUG IRRATIONALITY I am writing in response to Jeffrey Eisenberg's March 26 column, "Exposing common drug use myths." While Mr. Eisenberg identifies some logical loopholes in the "war against drugs" argument, I feel that he is missing some fundamental truths at the root of the threat that drug use poses to the individual. The basic flaw of Mr. Eisenberg's argument is his failure to acknowledge the biological ways in which drugs affect humans. The factors of free will and rationality are taken out of the decision making equation when a drug like cocaine is used to manipulate dopamine levels in the brain. As coke produces its "high," it is simultaneously operating along neurological pathways that allow it to be powerfully addicting at the same time. Beneath Mr. Eisenberg's rationale is the fundamental assumption that a person under the influence of drugs or addicted to drugs still has access to the same powers of reason as a person with a clear and unadulterated mind. A sane person with full rational capabilities, however, would never smack his or her head against a stone wall; a person subject to the chemically induced addictive powers of a drug like cocaine or heroin may engage in self-endangering activities as a result of the drug habit. I used to work with recovering drug addicts in a recovery center; to be asked to believe that, for example, the broke 45 year old heroin addict who robbed gas stations for drug money would have done so in his right mind, had drugs not been involved, is ludicrous. To me, this article seems little more than an immature and exhibitionary attempt on Mr. Eisenberg's part to demonstrate his ability to construct a sound argument based on the principles of logic. Even on this ground, I feel, he has failed. Alice C. Ours CLAS IV - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake