Pubdate: Thu, 04 Jul 2002 Source: Monday Magazine (CN BC) Copyright: 2002 Monday Publications Contact: http://mondaymag.com/monday/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1150 Author: Alisa Gordaneer THE NEEDLE POINT Me, I'm scared of needles. It's one of those irrational fears, and tends to keep me away from dentist visits and blood donation clinics. It kept me from being able to administer insulin to our diabetic cat, and it also kept me from ever experimenting with heroin back in my rebellious teen years (phew). And it kept me from picking up the needle I found on the ground a few months ago, even though that ground happened to be in my backyard, and the needle had to get gone, quick, before the kids touched it. But before my husband took it away with a pair of kitchen tongs, I made sure to show it to my four-year-old, instructing him to "never, ever, ever touch one of those." Freelance writer Andrea Scott-Bigsby hoped she'd have that same sort of educational opportunity (if you can call it that) before her own son ever came across an abandoned needle. But as she explains on page 8, that didn't happen, with disturbing results. And as Anh Hoang writes on page 7, there are more and more needles out there, just waiting to be found. Seems like everyone's got a needle story this summer. It's not surprising. Every year, tonnes of heroin--the developed world's injectable drug-of-choice--dribble into North America a few kilograms at a time, the end product of an industry that is worth hundreds of millions of dollars. It comes from countries like Myanmar, Afghanistan, Colombia--places where there are few laws or organized governments, and plenty of desperate people who make their meagre livings laboriously scraping the raw material--opium gum--from the pods of poppies. From there, the mark-up is drastic, and the costs--human and social--of trafficking add up astronomically. A lot of people make a lot of money along the way between those poppy fields and the streets of Victoria--but it's the people at either end of the chain--the growers and the end users of the refined (and usually, by then, adulterated) heroin--who suffer. Neither has adequate support or means to change their situation. And neither can be blamed for depending on each other, strangers halfway across the world. The U.S.-led "war on drugs" has cost billions of dollars, and achieved--what? We can measure its success thus far right here in Victoria, by looking at the ground and counting the number of used--and potentially dangerous--syringes on our streets. It's easy to complain about them, and easy enough, too, to pick them up and dispose of them safely. But that's not the point. I'm hoping my own fear of needles will spill over, not just to my kids, but to our community. In turn, I hope, that fear will demand attention, and that attention will demand action. What kind of action? Preferably the kind that happens locally. The kind that comes with lots of money and results, like government and city initiatives. The kind that helps those who can't help but toss their used needles into backyards, parks or playgrounds. Because that's the kind of action that really brings the point home. - --- MAP posted-by: Alex