Pubdate: Mon, 24 Jan 2005 Source: Labradorian, The (CN NF) Copyright: 2005 The Labradorian Contact: http://labradorian.optipresspublishing.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3565 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) THIS IS YOUR BRAIN ON DRUGS The idea that drugs are permeating our schools was thrown to the public forefront last week largely due to an incident in St. John's that resulted in a pair of Junior High students being sent to hospital after smoking what was thought to be contaminated marijuana. Parents, teachers, interest groups and school board officials alike came forth in droves with concerns about the idea of drugs getting into our school system and they offered all kinds of measures as to what could be done to prevent the problem Unfortunately, for all of you under the impression this is a new thing, perhaps you'd better sit down. Preventing drugs from actually getting in schools is a foregone conclusion -- they're already there in a big way. We know this because we've seen it first hand over the last 10 years or so. At High Schools, it's been a common practice for kids to head outside during recess or lunch break to share a joint, usually consisting of hashish or marijuana, although cocaine and ecstasy have become frighteningly popular and more available in recent times. The smell of leather jackets, cold air and weed still permeates our nostrils today. Over the past 10 years, of course, the industry has grown significantly, to the point where drugs are almost as readily available as fresh air. This is not the movies. You won't find some trench-coated shady character with a maniacal laugh sneaking onto school grounds pushing his product on kids -- that's not how this stuff works today. Most of the potheads we knew simply went to their favourite dealer after school to stock up. It's a consumer-retail based market nowadays - -- simple supply and demand. People have a desire to consume something, so they go out and buy it. There is no need for aggressive marketing (pushing) on the part of the dealer. So how can we combat the problem? Short of handcuffing a child to the bed at home, there is really nothing parents can do to stop kids from being around the stuff or even experimenting -- sooner or later, they ALL will, no matter how stern and determined you are. The only option you have, horror of horrors, is to actually talk to your kids in an open and frank manner. However educated kids are about their choices is however intelligent they will be in making them. How many, we wonder, will be well-versed enough to know the stuff isn't really that good for you and not make it a habit? How many will not be so well-versed and go on to make drugs their social calling card? Although the terminology might be a little different in today's school system, there will always be nerds, jocks, preppies and druggies -- you can bet the farm on it. Which group will your child fall into? It's really up to you. We have choices. We can leave these decisions to over-educated bureaucrats with psychology degrees who have no comprehension whatsoever of what's going on at the ground level in the school, or we can be proactive with our own kids and make sure they are very well-informed about what's out there and what their options are. One choice we don't have is closing our eyes, plugging our ears and hoping it simply goes away. We can't totally prevent drugs from being available and we will have increasing difficulty keeping it out of the schools. But we can prevent our kids from walking into the drug maelstrom like the proverbial prom-night virgins, unaware of the demons that await them. An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure, they say. Where do you think a gram of weed fits on that scale? - --- MAP posted-by: Derek