Pubdate: Wed, 14 Jan 2004 Source: Surrey Now (CN BC) Copyright: 2004 Lower Mainland Publishing Group Inc., A Canwest Company Contact: http://www.thenownewspaper.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1462 Author: Chris Ayres Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v04/n053/a09.html 'WAR' ON DRUGS SHOULD NOT BE INFLICTED ON STUDENTS The Editor, Re: "Drug dogs would cost schools," the Now, Jan. 7. Thankfully there will most likely be too little money left over in the kitty after waging war on gay literature and the provincial government's inability to raise our budget appropriately to pursue this nonsense of drug dogs in our schools. In my Canada, our beautiful Charter protects all citizens, even students. Schools are a place of learning, not a battle ground, and the establishment's "war" on drugs has no place in our youth's halls. Youth use drugs for a number of reasons, most of which are the exact same reasons why their parents experimented. There are already tools available to teachers to deal with problem students being high in class. Leave the "war" to the adults. This will not prevent little Timmy from becoming a crack-head. Crack-heads do not attend high school. We as a society need to stop parenting through our institutions, be they schools, police or government. Rather than converting our houses of knowledge into an even grander fascist state, why don't we loosen the reigns even further to allow true discourse of ideas and preserve their role as the last stab at true self-expression? I graduated six years ago, so it is still fresh in my mind how much high school sucked. You get ragged on for chewing gum, picked on by the popular kids, censored for Marilyn Manson shirts and detentions for using language that I am sure frequents the teachers lounge as much as it does in any work place. You have to ask permission to use the washroom! Imagine doing that at work. As a parent I fully understand the fears that come along with the responsibility, and with much dread I am watching my son enter the public school system next year. Drugs are not my main fear. Through education, love and attentiveness I am confident that my son will learn the place and time for drugs. I do fear, however, the lack of books, the oversized classrooms, overbearing knee-jerk reactions to teenage angst and experimentation, and the effects that other students - - whose parents treat education as a daycare - will have on my son. I fear his creativity or self-expression will be stifled because they do not fall within the guidelines of our standardized learning environments. These are the issues that should concern us. The war on drugs and the upper hand with which it is enforced has robbed our adult world of so much as is. Let's leave the kids to being kids. Their world is crappy enough, even if only in their eyes, they do not need to become a part of our war, nor do I think they care to. Chris Ayres Surrey - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin