Pubdate: Sat, 25 May 2002
Source: Independent  (UK)
Copyright: 2002 Independent Newspapers (UK) Ltd.
Contact:  http://www.independent.co.uk/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/209
Author: Steve Boggan
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mdma.htm (Ecstasy)

HAPPY CLUBBERS CARE LITTLE FOR MPS' CALL TO DOWNGRADE ECSTASY

More than a decade after MDMA became commonplace, official thinking still 
lags behind the realities of its recreational use

The music is so loud that your organs vibrate. As your eyes become used to 
the lasers and dry ice, the impression is of slow motion. Everyone seems to 
be walking on the moon, they seem tactile ... happy.

It is a brewery's nightmare: a London club where almost everyone is on 
methylenedioxy-metamphetamine - MDMA, ecstasy or E; the drug that a Home 
Affairs Select Committee last week recommended downgrading from a class A 
to a class B controlled substance.

A reduction from A to B means little in practice - the maximum penalty for 
possession is simply reduced from seven years to five. But the message sent 
out by the mostly white, middle-aged and middle-class MPs is being seen by 
some as groundbreaking. Was this a signal that, contrary to the tabloids' 
view, ecstasy was not such a corrupter of our children?

As an exercise in canvassing opinion, the people in this London club hardly 
represented a paradigm for empirical research. Those questioned were 
invariably, in their own words, "off their heads". Yes, they said, ecstasy 
should be legalised. It's wonderful. And, by the way, you're a really 
lovely man.

This is how ecstasy-users talk. Patented in 1913 by the drug company Merck 
as a dieting aid that was never marketed, MDMA gives feelings of empathy, 
warmth and euphoria. Violence is almost unheard of in a venue where ecstasy 
is the drug of choice.

MDMA comes as powder, which can be snorted, or more usually as a pill. The 
pills, costing as little now as UKP5 or less each, usually carry a logo. 
The current favourite is the Mitsubishi car company badge, but in the past 
there have been doves, dollar signs, Mercedes, Rolling Stones lips and many 
others.

A pill takes about 40 minutes to work and can last for one to four hours. 
It raises the temperature, increases the heart rate and dilates pupils. It 
suppresses the appetite, wards off tiredness and, paradoxically, makes 
users want either to dance or sit quietly in, they say, ecstasy.

"You simply can't explain to people just what it's like," said Luke, 30, a 
smiling computer analyst who is massaging his girlfriend's back. "You feel 
wonderful, everyone is your friend, all your social inhibitions drop and 
you find yourself talking to - and really befriending - complete strangers. 
For a while, the world is how it should be."

These clubbers are not impressed with reclassifying ecstasy. They took a 
risk when the penalty for possession was seven years. And they will take 
the same risk now that it is five.

"I doubt if anyone gave the news a second thought," said Luke's girlfriend, 
Anna, 24. "Ecstasy is everywhere and it has been for more than a decade. 
The police know it, but people on E cause them no trouble at all, 
particularly compared with people on alcohol. I don't know anyone who's had 
a bad time on it but I know lots of people who have been sick, got hurt or 
made a fool of themselves on drink. As long as you're caught only carrying 
enough for yourself, you're more likely to get just a caution these days."

Commander Brian Paddick, whose relaxed drugs policy in Brixton, south 
London, caused a political storm, said in his evidence to the Home Affairs 
Select Committee: "If I felt that my officers were going into nightclubs 
looking for people who were in possession of ecstasy then I would say to 
them, and I would say publicly, that they are wasting valuable police 
resources ... I would say there are far more important things which cause 
real harm to the community."

The people who really need to worry are the dealers, but they show no sign 
of concern in this club. You can spot them in huddles, selling to eager 
clubbers. Pills? they ask, unsolicited. If you can see them, so can the 
club's security. But a club without E is like a wake. On sale here are 
Mitsubishis at UKP5 from one dealer, and tablets with a logo like an 
elliptical triangle at UKP7 from another.

"These guys perform a service because they take a risk," said Andy, a 
27-year-old mechanic with wildly dilated pupils. "This stuff should be 
legal but they have to take a risk to get it to people who want it. And we 
all want it."

Professor John Henry, a clinical toxicologist at St Mary's Hospital, 
London, told the select committee: "I personally think that ecstasy is 
relatively safe in the short term. The long-term risk is to my mind unknown 
at present, although as each year goes by I get relatively more sanguine 
about the risk rather than less. I accept there is still a great deal of 
uncertainty about the long-term effects on the brain. In terms of 
addictiveness, it is very low."

Half a million people take ecstasy each weekend but death is rare. In 2000, 
27 people died out of an estimated 55 million pills taken. This was just 
2.2 per cent of drug-related deaths. In 1999, 754 people died taking 
heroin, 87 from cocaine, and hundreds of thousands from using alcohol and 
tobacco.

Release, a drugs charity, is not impressed with reclassification of MDMA. 
Kevin Flemen, its deputy director, said: "Reducing it to class B does 
nothing for either prevention or damage control. We would like to see it 
legalised and regulated. It should be sold in a pharmaceutically safe form 
at chemists - once users had to queue up for it with people waiting for 
their pile cream, it would soon look a lot less glamorous."

So, does reclassification represent a veiled acceptance? Chris Mullin, the 
committee chairman, says it does not. Instead, the intention was to put 
some distance between it, and heroin and cocaine, a distinction intended to 
help educate young people against drugs.

"This is clearly not as harmful as heroin or crack," he said. "But it can 
still be a dangerous drug and it is not one that we would like to see 
legalised."
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom