Pubdate: Wed, 21 Jul 2004 Source: Smyth County News & Messenger (VA) Copyright: The Smyth County News & Messenger 2004 Contact: http://www.smythnews.com/contact.html Website: http://www.smythnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2090 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?199 (Mandatory Minimum Sentencing) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) COVERING A SCOURGE It seems this newspaper could open a bureau devoted to covering methamphetamine. Many of our front pages have carried stories about meth busts, and we have editorialized on the matter a few times already. The issue deserves the coverage. Meth manufacturing, distribution and use are crimes. That's reason enough to cover law enforcement efforts to curb all three. More than crimes, behaviors revolving around meth constitute a lifestyle. The conversions of rooms in homes into meth labs, and the veil of secrecy that surrounds meth constitute a lifestyle. What we have is a growing counterculture. That term is hip now, a romanticized concept four decades after the 60's generation stood against the establishment and espoused the experience of love and spirit and the use of drugs to enhance the experience. But the word counterculture as applied to the meth lifestyle is a dark, sinister term. It speaks of behavior that is counter to the law. Counter to family values. Counter to public safety. Counter to health. The flower children flourished in the light of what they saw as a new kind of freedom. People involved in meth live shadowy lives, trapped in corner where the light of discovery can mean a prison of bars. Drug involvment can, under new law, mean the loss of children who are taken into protective custody away from hazardous materials and exposure to an unhealthy lifestyle. Meth labs can blow up and leave behind waste that only certified handlers can clean up. Neighbors are exposed to harmful fumes. Meth use has detrimental effects on the bran and nervous system. And meth makers and users know better. Their unwillingness and inability to stop reveal the power of profit and addiction. Law enforcement officers are doing a grand job of sniffing out and closing meth labs. They're getting some help and more is on the way. Storekeepers sometime call the police when a customer buys a large quantity of materals used in meth manufacturing. Buy a gallon of iodine, and Sheriff Bradley's phone may ring. And soon, a new law will require store clerks to blow the whistle when customers make suspicious purchases. It's going to take more then that. Virginia's EXILE program mandates a minimum of five years' imprisonment for felons who have guns, for anyone with a gun on school property and plans to use it or who brandish it, and have a gun along with Schedule I and II drugs or a pound a marijuana to sell. A similar program may be needed to punish meth users. The dangers surround meth manufacturing are great enough to the public to warrant a long prison sentence on the first conviction of any level of involvement with the drug, from its use to its creation. The stakes will have to be set high with harsh penalties that outweight the profit and pleasure of meth. Otherwise, and one police officer recently said, it won't stop until something blows up. Maybe not even then. Meanwhile, we will continue to cover meth busts, publish names and photos of the arrested and follows the cases to their conclusion in court. No other work we have to do is more important than keeping this scourge on the front pages as law enforcement battles to stop it. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin