Pubdate: Sat, 21 Sep 2002 Source: Red Deer Advocate (CN AB) Copyright: 2002 Red Deer Advocate Contact: http://www.reddeeradvocate.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2492 Author: Mary-Ann Barr LOSING THE WAR ON DRUGS I found life in Red Deer rather sad when I returned this week to work from holidays. This city, like every other community in the country - whatever its size - has lost the war against drugs. One young man died this week and two other people are in hospital, apparently following illicit drug use. I believe - although I've certainly heard less sympathetic views - it's tragic that 25-year-old Greg Walls came to Alberta from Ontario with a dream to work in the booming oilpatch and apparently died on a drug bender. In the end, he apparently chose the low road and succumbed to a lethal dose of drugs. We don't know what drugs he took for that final high. It may have been ecstasy, a designer drug that police see increasingly. Toxicology reports and a fatality inquiry will tell us eventually whether Walls was doing one drug or a cocktail of the various street drugs readily available in Red Deer such as cocaine, heroin or horse tranquilizer. This week an anecdote was relayed to me that kind of says it all about drugs. An angry father arrived at a local facility in Red Deer frequented by young people to retrieve his young son, who obviously did not have permission to be there. The father placed his son in his vehicle and went back to the facility and told another adult there that this was no place for youngsters since drugs were probably used there. The other adult replied that the facility shouldn't be blamed, since drugs are available on almost every street corner in the city. Red Deer is no different than anywhere else, and for certain elements to label this city as the drug capital of Alberta is silly. What all of this does, though, is to sharpen our view on a problem that exists everywhere. And maybe it's time to change the way we do battle with illegal drugs. First, keep in mind that there will always be illegal drugs available. Today it may be ecstasy (cut with additives such as rat poison) or Special K (horse tranquilizer). Police will continue to bust offenders and maybe even one day clean up current drugs like they did when the use of LSD 30 years ago eventually slowed down. But tomorrow it may be ya ba - a new, more powerful form of methamphetamine, stronger than ecstasy, now finding its way into the western U.S. If only it were as easy as decriminalizing simple possession of marijuana to win the war against society's relentless goal to get high. But it's not. There are only two ways to keep illegal drugs, and non-prescribed use of prescription drugs, off our streets. One is to get at the source and the other is education. When the kingpins behind illegal drug production, sale and distribution are locked up, and when society no longer needs a drug-induced high, the battle may end. But in a world where alcohol and prescription drugs are constantly abused, we see how difficult and huge the problem is. We have to always remember that the most prominent factor behind the sale and distribution of many street drugs is organized crime. To focus on the many small pawns who peddle drugs on our streets is throwing good money away. There are so many great highs out there - like catching a fish on a fly rod, like this weekend's mini "eco-challenge" involving biking, paddling and hiking, like sitting around the campfire telling ghost stories, like listening to Golden Oldies, like watching your kids grow up, like playing with your dogs . . . you get the picture. Yet a lot of people would prefer to get zombied on drugs and booze. Why? Getting high is part of the human condition. How we do it is vital. All work and no play are not healthy. But teaching "play" is as important as teaching math. If we teach our children that there are healthy highs in life, then hopefully, after they get through the experimental stage, they will choose a healthy lifestyle. If not, then there's this to consider: There are certain specifics we place onus on in our society when it comes to teaching our children to be safe about such things as handling weapons, driving, boating, playing with fire. Yet when it comes to illegal drugs, we just tell them to say no. It's not enough. Given the common use of illegal drugs today, it's likely that most youths will encounter them. At the very least, we can arm them with more information. It's not too radical to go one step further and teach: "But if you don't say no, here's how to be safe about it, or here's how to recognize a potentially lethal overdose." In the U.S., a great deal of money is spent on law enforcement, courts and prison losing the war on drugs. In fact, in the U.S., 90 per cent of drug-related arrests are for possession only. One U.S. senator, Gary Johnson of New Mexico, says illegal drug use is a health problem, not a criminal justice problem. Perhaps he's right. If people comprehend they are jeopardizing their health as we saw so clearly this week in Red Deer, perhaps illegal drug use would slow and a lot of the big-time players would be out of business. Courts can get tougher, but as we've seen, the experiment in the U.S. has not solved the problem. We should focus on convincing our children, and ourselves, that taking the low road to unnatural highs does lead to death. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh