Pubdate: Mon, 11 Apr 2005 Source: Sidelines, The (TN Edu) Section: Opinion, Column "Half Naked" Copyright: 2005 Middle Tennessee State University Contact: http://www.mtsusidelines.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2861 Author: Wendy Caldwell Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) USERS OF SUDAFED SHOULDN'T SUFFER BECAUSE OF METH Tennessee has really gone overboard this time: You can no longer buy Sudafed at a store that doesn't have a pharmacy. It's all part of the grand, master plan to get methamphetamines off the streets. The pseudoephedrine used as an ingredient in Sudafed and other such cold pills is also a common ingredient in meth, which is now becoming a more rampant problem in Tennessee. Now, in order to purchase the drug, one must go to a pharmacy and fill out a form containing name and address, in addition to signing for the drug. One must also show identification before receiving the drug, and it certainly can't be bought in bulk to prevent future sniffles. After all, they don't know you. Maybe you're running a small meth operation out of your dorm room. Signing a name, showing ID and filling out a log make sense when dealing with easily-abused controlled substances, such as narcotic painkillers. A 14-year-old kid with a headache shouldn't be able to get a bottle of Percocets three times a year. But Sudafed? It doesn't even require a prescription. All you have to do is go up to the pharmacist and ask for it. Heck - he'll probably ask you if you want regular or generic. This is Tennessee, and allergies run rampant across the state, probably more so than meth. I've never been gung-ho about this War on Drugs, but this is getting ridiculous. Making it a pain in the butt to get cold medicine isn't going to have that great of an impact on our meth problem. These people - the pioneers of meth - are willing to cook all kinds of stuff that one should never ingest, many times at the risk of violent, yet, cool explosion, in order to make an extra buck or two or million. Then, they're willing to ingest the stuff, or at least pass it off to friends and accomplices. The state legislature seems to think this bill is actually going to have some great impact on these meth masters and deter them from making the stuff. Call me crazy, but don't criminals generally have pretty decent access to things like fake IDs. A fake ID could come in really handy when someone needs lots of cold medicine. Five fake IDs could come in even handier. I shouldn't be saying such things. Soon, they'll start fingerprinting for Sudafed. And let's not forget that Tennessee borders eight states. If my income relied on something as commonplace as Sudafed, I wouldn't be above crossing state lines to hit up a few gas stations and Wal-Marts. The new legislation simply makes obtaining meth ingredients a little more involved and a little more inconvenient. It also strips the rest of us of just a little more of that freedom we all rant and rave about so much. When the government has the power and the audacity to insist you sign your name and address before buying cold medicine, things have gone too far. It was more than disheartening to discover there are a few medical uses for meth. I can see how narcolepsy can be a problem, but I think I'd choose that over being a crank addict. Everyone has a few days when they feel fat, but a dose of crystal isn't much better. And if that Ritalin doesn't cure your attention deficit disorder, try some glass to go with that homework. Maybe obliterating these few medical uses would help. Maybe not. It certainly wouldn't hurt to try that before tracking every person who has a runny nose. Instead of targeting everyday Joes and Janes who just want that sinus pressure to ease up a bit, find a better way of targeting the actual meth users and manufacturers, and let the rest of us sneeze in peace. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth