Pubdate: Mon, 04 Mar 2002 Source: Scotsman (UK) Copyright: The Scotsman Publications Ltd 2002 Contact: http://www.scotsman.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/406 Author: Katie Grant Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/hr.htm (Harm Reduction) LEARNING FROM THOSE WHO DO SAY NO TO DRUGS Those who claim to know how to deal with Scotland's drug problem are lying. Drugs experts, drugs tsars, drugs agencies - we've had them all, and the result has been that by the age of 15, two-thirds of Scotland's children, wherever they live, have been offered drugs. Getting Scots to "just say no", thus destroying the drug barons' market and therefore their interest in Scotland, has failed spectacularly. Jails, schools, clubs, pubs, community centres, shopping precincts, churches - there is nowhere in Scotland left to go in which you could be certain that there would not be a user in sight. So what now? Should we put any more faith in Dr Richard Simpson's new "harm reduction, rehabilitation and information strategy"? Frankly, no. Dr Simpson's intentions may be good, but the truth is that as long as cheap drugs flood Scottish streets, so Scots will continue to snort them, shoot them or eat them. But not all Scots. There are Scots who say no - quite a few, actually. We can learn a lot from them. Asking clean 15-year-olds why they do not take drugs is just as useful as asking a similar group why they do. After getting over their initial terror at being thought goody-goodies or, worse, "uncool", non-drug-taking teenagers say things such as "Well, like, I don't need to" or "It's not, like, necessary for me". Drug-takers, it seems, perceive their lives to be blighted by a vacuum of some sort, a vacuum they feel either the need or necessity for drugs to fill. Non-drug-takers do not see such a vacuum in their own lives but are willing, without question, to accept this as an excuse from their friends. This does not mean that non-drug-takers come from stable, middle-class families with private education and glittering career prospects. We know that to be untrue. Rather, non-drug-takers, whatever the circumstances of their lives, have somehow grasped and retained a better sense of their own value and integrity, a sense strong enough to make the idea of losing control, whether for a joint, an E or a heroin fix, a resistible temptation. This is where the drugs debate should start, not with more information, debates about reclassification or abstruse arguments about libertarianism. We already have information overload. Classification is a red herring. And as for libertarianism, the intellectual position so beloved of politicians trying to be "cool", this is fine when all things are equal. But apropos drugs, all things are not equal. Peer group pressure, pushers, poverty of aspiration, sink-estate deprivation and the moral vacuum we have mistaken for personal freedom see to that. Deal with these things, then talk about libertarianism. Indeed, deal with these things and the drugs problem may just take care of itself. THE newest Scottish Social Attitudes Survey tells us that only 10 per cent of us go to church every week. Does it matter? Well, as one of the 10 per cent - and yes, I admit to obliging my children to come with me, although I know it cannot be long before the ECHR declares it to be a breach of their human rights - you will not be surprised to know that I think it does. Looking round the congregation yesterday, I saw businessmen, homeless men with plastic bags, women with too many children, women with none, rich and poor elderly couples, sad teenagers, happy students, the odd drunk, a nun or two and some people who were, I think, asylum-seekers. For the hour we were in church we were all equal, just people trying to raise our hearts and minds above the mundane, above the material, above ourselves. A weekly visit to church provides an opportunity to breathe, a chance, in our noisy world, just to be quiet. We all need such times, not just 10 per cent of us. If you require any more encouragement, why not look at it this way? Churches are the only places left in which mobile phones are never heard. An hour a week without the Nokia tune? Just think what it could do for your sanity. TODAY sees a first for me. I am to present Lesley Riddoch's BBC Radio Scotland show while she spends 24 hours recovering from a week in Ireland charting the final death-throes of the Irish punt. I expect a good wake was enjoyed by all, particularly the Dublin retailers who have decided to use the euro changeover as older women use the underwired bra - ie to give their figures a bit of a lift. Anyhow, being rather nervous I'm bound to press the wrong buttons, forget my own name or say something on air that was meant only for private consumption. The unflappable BBC production team have promised to hover like paramedics. If you tune in, I apologise in advance for any gaffes. Tin hats on. It may be a bumpy ride. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth