Pubdate: Fri, 19 Aug 2005
Source: Sampson Independent, The (NC)
Copyright: 2005, The Sampson Independent
Contact:  http://www.clintonnc.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1704
Author: L.E. Brown Jr.
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine)
Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v05/n1277/a01.html?106021

IDLE COMMENT

It's rare for a New York Times columnist to write something worth thinking 
about, so when one does, it ought to be grabbed. John Tierney can't keep 
the typical liberal slant out of a complete column, including the 
obligatory dig toward law enforcement, but he does make some valid points 
worth thinking about. America has a serious drug problem, he says, but it's 
not the manufacture and use of methamphetamines that is the serious problem.

He manages a dig at conservative William Bennett, whom he refers to as the 
"former national drug czar and gambler," when he says that the problem is 
the one identified by Bennett when Bennett said: "Using drugs is wrong not 
simply because drugs create medical problems; it is wrong because drugs 
destroy one's moral sense.

People addicted to drugs neglect their duties."  So Tierney's analysis is: 
"This problem afflicts not only a small minority of the people who have 
tried methamphetamines, but most of the law-enforcement officials and 
politicians who lead the war against drugs. They're so consumed with drugs 
that they've lost sense of their duties."  Tierney writes that those people 
are like addicts desperate for a high and, with the help of the press, are 
"frightening the public with tales of a drug so seductive it instantly 
turns masses of upstanding citizens into addicts who ruin their health, 
their lives and their families." Tierney concedes that methamphetamines 
certainly do harm and "are a fad in some places.

But there's little evidence of a new national epidemic from patterns of 
drug arrests or drug use." He writes that if an addict is someone who has 
used a drug in the previous month, then only five percent of Americans who 
have sampled meth would be called addicts, according to the federal 
government's National Survey on Drug Use and Health, compared to eight 
percent for crack, 10 percent for painkillers, 14 percent for marijuana and 
37 percent for cigarettes.  There is, of course, much more to the meth 
situation than Tierney simplistically talks about, but indirectly it seems 
he is trying to make the point that sometimes the illusion of an "epidemic" 
is created to rake in more money from taxpayers.  Non-profits do it all the 
time.  And Tierney doesn't dwell on reports that most meth appears to be 
imported.  Like heroin and other hard drugs.
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