Pubdate: Fri, 28 May 2010 Source: Ledger-Enquirer (Columbus,GA) Copyright: 2010 Ledger-Enquirer Contact: http://www.ledger-enquirer.com/mld/enquirer/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/237 Author: Tim Chitwood GEORGIA METH PROJECT INTRODUCES SHOCKING DRUG CAMPAIGN TO AREA Leader Talks About History Of Meth During Wwii People in Georgia may not have heard much about Nazi methamphetamine users =AD they're not featured in any of the shocking ads the Georgia Meth Project's has on TV and billboards =AD but they play a role in the drug's history. That was one of the odd facts Georgia Meth Project Executive Director Jim Langford mentioned Thursday to about 35 people at the Columbus Public Library, where campaign leaders came to talk about the meth project's future. Asked about the history of methamphetamine, Langford said Nazi leader Adolf Hitler had the drug distributed to German troops during World War II to keep their energy levels up so they could stay awake, keep fighting, kill without remorse and outlast their enemies. According to the website HowStuffWorks.com, =93Nazi leaders distributed millions of doses of methamphetamine in tablets called Pervitin to their infantry, sailors and airmen in World War II... In one four-month period in 1940, the German military was fed more than 35 million speed tablets. Though the pills were known to cause adverse health effects in some soldiers, it was also immediately realized that stimulants went a long way toward the Nazi dream of creating super-soldiers.=94 One way of manufacturing the drug is called =93the Nazi method,=94 Langford said, adding, =93You can't make this stuff up.=94 By now many Georgians are familiar with meth project TV ads featuring the zombie-like faces of young addicts with open sores and rotting teeth. Accompanying the TV campaign are billboard ads. A sign facing the westbound lanes of Columbus' 11th Street underpass shows blood in a bathroom sink with the words, =93No one thinks they'll try to tear off their own skin. Meth will change that.=94 Langford said addicts pick at their skin because they feel like bugs are under it. The TV ads are airing on cable channels such as MTV and VH1 but they'll soon spread to network affiliates, Langford said. With the motto =93Not Even Once,=94 they aim not to help people already using meth, but to keep anyone else from trying it. Langford said a survey showed 35 percent of Georgia teens thought trying methamphetamine posed no risks and about 20 percent thought the drug had benefits. Researchers estimate meth costs Georgia $1.3 billion annually in the expense of health care, foster care, law enforcement and incarceration, Langford said. Among the next steps in the meth campaign are recruiting volunteers to be trained in community outreach and assembling the tools those advocates will need for public education at community gatherings, said Latrina Patrick, a former Columbus resident who's now the Georgia Meth Project's program manager. Anyone interested may contact the campaign online via Facebook or its website, www.georgiamethproject.org. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart