Pubdate: Thu, 10 Aug 2006 Source: Sampson Independent, The (NC) Copyright: 2006, The Sampson Independent Contact: http://www.clintonnc.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1704 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) SOUNDING THE METH ALARM Legislative measures have been taken to limit the amount of pseudoephedrine that can be purchased; law enforcement has extended its arm as far as it can to shut down labs and apprehend users and sellers; and dozens of agencies have formed partnerships to tackle the social, psychologial and health issues. But the problem with the manufacture and use of methamphetamine continues to grow. Unfortunately, we don't see the problem waning any time soon. It's not that people from all walks aren't trying to stop meth use; it's that the people we all are trying to reach aren't listening or aren't taking the warnings seriously. For sellers, the warnings matter little. All they are interested in is making money from the addiction of others. They don't care if the drug addicts; they don't care that it destroys lives. But for users, the warnings should be heeded. What is being said is certainly meant to frighten, but it's not exaggerated in an attempt to scare people into stopping the habit. It's a very real problem with very real and dangerous consequences. Meth users do become addicts ... nearly the minute they partake of their first does. Meth users find themselves losing massive amounts of weight; developing boils or sores; and losing interest in just about everything except the drug that has taken hold of their lives. Meth users can't hold jobs. Meth users who try to cook their own drug put themselves and their families at risk. Meth users likely, without help and with continued use, will die. Yet none of those facts seem to faze the growing number of people who have decided to toss good sense to the wind in exchange for yet another high, yet another way to escape their lives. Recently, Sampson County law enforcement officers found and dismantled its 12th meth lab. The number of arrests are continuing to mount. And, it's likely that for every person arrested, there's at least triple that number using and getting away with it. Neighboring Duplin County has a similar problem with meth, and is facing the same dilemmas we do here. And, as with every other illegal drug that addicts seek and sellers ply, other crimes are sure to follow. From robberies and home invasions to murders, nearly every crime we read about in the newspapers can be tied to drug use. That alone should signal to each of us just how devastating this problem is. What's more, it should also signal the impact drug problems have on all our lives, whether we use or not. That's why doing all we can to educate people to the devastation meth can cause is so important. If it takes scaring them; if it takes arresting them; if it takes catching them and finding them help, then that's what it should take and what should be done. Stamping out meth use is imperative to all our lives. It's true of any drug, but we believe it's never been truer or more imperative than with meth use. Too many lives have been broken; too many children have been impacted; too many communities have been torn apart for us not to sound the alarm and call on others to do the same. We must do our part. Any less would be burying our heads in the sand and pretending no problem exist. That may work for a while, but in the end, reality will bite and bite hard. So let's work together to educate, help and, if necessary, arrest until we stop meth from taking over our lives. - --- MAP posted-by: Steve Heath