Pubdate: Fri, 28 Nov 2003 Source: Lindsay This Week (CN ON) Copyright: 2003 Lindsay This Week Contact: http://www.lindsaythisweek.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2213 Author: Lance Anderson Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) WANT TO GET THE MESSAGE ACROSS TO TEENS? SIMPLE -- GROSS 'EM OUT Casting Words "The basic thing nobody asks is why do people take drugs of any sort? Why do we have these accessories to normal living to live? I mean, is there something wrong with society that's making us so pressurized that we cannot live without guarding ourselves against it?" - -- Jim Morrison It's like an ocean wave hitting a jagged shore and taking every bit of fun off to sea. That's how teens today must feel every time they hear the yes's and no's of drug and alcohol use. It's a message that's falling on deaf ears because its repetitive gibberish does no good. Rather, it make kids curious about the taboos of drinking and drugs. Useless anti-drug and anti-drinking word messages aren't working and never will. Organizations think they are doing wonders by shoving the ill-effects of substance use down teens' throats when really all they are doing is making a rebellious generation out of an already defiant bunch. Thankfully, not all teens fall into this category. Most likely the respectful ones don't frequently strive for the intoxicating pleasures drugs and alcohol bring. They're more focused on getting good marks to get a good job. Many who believe these anti-drug messages work will oppose this opinion. But look at the findings of a recent province-wide youth drug survey and you'll see kids today partake now more than ever. Across the province, 6,616 students in grades 7 to 12 participated in the survey last spring. The Ontario Student Drug Use Survey shows marijuana use is on the rise -- surprise, surprise -- as well as cocaine and crack use. This is primarily due to the availability of these drugs throughout the province - a reality local OPP drug cop Dean Steinke of the Kawartha Combined Forces Drug Unit sees every day. "Cocaine is in the area and on the streets," he says. "Marijuana is the drug of choice because it's a mild, soft drug." Even though the survey says ecstasy use amongst teens is down, from 6 per cent to 4.1 per cent in two years, Detective Sergeant Steinke says many kids are still popping the pills because the high lasts longer than that afforded by most drugs. That coupled with the growing rave scene makes policing the drug next to impossible. In addition to drugs, youths continue the long tradition of drunken parties and binge drinking, according to the survey. This age-old practice will never go away because alcohol is a means to becoming socially accepted. There's a standard teens must live up to and the amount of beers chugged in one sitting without puking is something to be proud of. Det. Sgt. Steinke believes the massive amounts of education kids are bombarded with works, even though he admits that getting the message through is getting tougher. "Youth I talk to are educated and know what their limits are and know the drugs," he said. The reality is most teens drink and/or do drugs. The trick is to get them to understand the risks without jamming the message down their throats. Stiffer jail sentences for big-time users and dealers that start setting precedents in our all-too-forgiving courts will work. Show teens the gritty reality of prolonged and excessive use of drugs and alcohol instead of telling them. If we can see a set of rotten teeth on a cigarette pack, why not plaster about pictures of some skinny, strung-out junkie stuffing a dirty needle in their arm in their back-alley home? Grossing them out is the only way to get the attention of today's youth who are already desensitized to most things. It's a medieval approach to a modern-world problem that will work. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin