Pubdate: Tue, 20 Nov 2007 Source: Post-Bulletin (Rochester, MN) Column: Teen Beat Copyright: 2007 Post-Bulletin Company, LLC Contact: http://www.postbulletin.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1342 Author: Andrea Villarraga Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/opinion.htm (Opinion) USING ILLEGAL DRUGS HURTS THE WORLD After the countless, monotonous lectures and educational pamphlets I've received over the years, I like to think of myself as pretty well-informed when it comes to illegal drugs. I've heard all about the effects of cocaine, marijuana, LSD, methane and speed. I know grades drop, concentration diminishes and relationships suffer. I even have a brief notion of how some of these drugs work at the neuronal synapse level. In other words, I know how drugs would affect me if I chose to take them. This is the goal of the bulk of education about illegal drugs, especially in high school. Adults (parents in particular) want kids to know how horrid life will become for the addict if they begin consuming. The information people receive about drugs mainly concentrates on the effects on the individual. The effects on the rest of the world are largely left out. What happens to the countries that grow and export the cocaine, the opium, the marijuana? Just like what happens to any heavy drug addict, drugs infiltrate countries like Afghanistan and Colombia at every imaginable level. The drug industry impacts drug-producing countries economically. Currently, illicit drugs are in demand, and this is reflected in the amount of drug money that enters drug-exporting countries. Many of these countries' economies are even built around or supported by the drug trade: much of Jamaica's economy would collapse if they discontinued the growth and export of marijuana. In other countries, laundering drug money is a major issue. Also, since illegally-attained money cannot be taxed, a small percent of the population (the Mafia) often becomes uncontrollably rich while honest, rule-abiding citizens struggle with poverty. Take a look at most of the major drug trafficking countries in the world such as Bolivia, Brazil, China, Ecuador, Haiti, India, Nigeria, Pakistan and Vietnam, and you'll understand how deeply the drug trade is entrenched into their political and judicial systems. Dirty dollars and Euros are tossed around by drug lords all over the system; with them, they influence the passing of laws that favor the trafficking of narcotics. They bribe lawyers, judges, witnesses and law enforcement agencies. If you were to buy a ounce of coke, you'd be funding, among other things, international terrorism, paramilitaries, guerrilla armies, the Mafia's private armies, wars, revenge murders, abductions and the displacement of millions of innocents. The message that we most often get from anti-drug education is that drugs will destroy your own life. Very few times will you run across an educator that will stress the number of others you'll take down with you. For you, drugs might be a form of Friday-night recreation or the object of rebellious curiosity. Just remember that for somebody else, drugs are the difference between poverty and wealth, between corruption and integrity. For at least one person in the world, the choice you make at a party in Rochester, could mean the difference between life and death. - --- Andrea Villarraga is a sophomore at Lourdes High School. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom