Pubdate: Sat, 07 Jan 2012 Source: Silver City Sun-News (NM) Copyright: 2012 Silver City Sun-News Contact: http://www.scsun-news.com/silver_city-contact_us Website: http://www.scsun-news.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3901 Author: Bill Varuola Note: Bill Varuola is 33-year resident of Las Cruces who is employed by the Las Cruces school district as a teacher at the Dona Ana County Juvenile Detention Center. POLICE AND OUR PENCHANT FOR MIND-ALTERING DRUGS Consider, please, the police officer, the sheriff's deputy, the state police trooper. They are all that stands between us and the mayhem and chaos of intentional lawlessness. Most of what goes wrong that they must try to contain stems from our insatiable appetites for drugs and alcohol. We are careful to distinguish between "our" substance use and "their" abuse, though it is law enforcement that has to sort it out. With that in mind, think of the less than alert citizenry they must deal with in our community. There are the suburbs and the professional community, where substance abuse is more nuanced, where designated drivers are more likely to come into play, where, when law enforcement comes into the picture, there might be specialized need and arrests are less likely than rehabilitation. There's the university student community, supplied beyond reason with sundry conscious altering substances that some believe to be their due as students. One wonders if arrests are commensurate with substance use during this odd hiatus when students expect to be given a four year pass from law enforcement just because of their peculiar status, adults at play. Lower to middle class use is more often reflected in the police blotter and other records of arrest - drug arrests for use and trafficking, drunk driving arrests, possession because they are in the places where law enforcement is most likely to be lurking. I encourage you to substitute your own notions of places, proportions and degrees of enforcement, so long as you reflect the fact that a literally mind-numbing amount of drugs and alcohol are consumed on a regular basis in this valley. And many consumers don't wait until they have some reason or rationale to indulge themselves. And there's the time it takes for the substance to leave someone's system so that it no longer has an effect on performance. We all see the residual effects at work, at school and throughout the community. A colleague who can't get enough sleep, a classmate who cannot concentrate on the matters at hand, a neighbor who seems a little twitchy, distracted and irritable. And they're encouraged by the popular media. Beer and liquor commercials featuring joy laden people courtesy of the featured beverage. Movies where consumption of the appropriate illegal substances brings mirth to all. (Do you know how many young people think marijuana is already legal in California?) Television programs where hard drugs bring bundles of money but little of the attendant misery. Sort of like politics. Not only do people under the influence loll about the house turning their brains into test tracks for chemical experiments, damaging interpersonal relationships, rending apart families, marriages and psyches, doing untold damage in the classroom and the workplace, causing interpersonal conflicts in the form of damaged professional relationships, physical fights, sexual assaults and other criminal acts, they just won't stay still. They insist on driving vehicles of all manner and sort, despite the fact that their judgment, timing and vision are affected. Worst of all, they refuse to put little yellow flags on their vehicles to let us know that they are impaired so we have to guess. Most, but not all, of these substances which we insist on having and consuming (I, for one, would like to hide the lighters; users are always patting themselves for a lighter) are of foreign origin. In fact, thousands of people die so that we Americans can sate our sundry habits, something to keep in mind the next time you casually light up. Were I inclined to relive my callow youth, this alone would be enough to dissuade me, this and the illegality factor. There are people in foreign countries fighting and dying, and killing innocent bystanders wholesale, for the privilege of controlling the most lucrative routes for getting drugs into and across the United States. I should mention that we sit squarely across one of the most sought after routes. Young Las Crucens are part of this distribution enterprise and identify with the several competing entrepreneurs in this illicit trade. They wish to do each other harm, in keeping with the way of things, so that those among us so-inclined can get a buzz every now and then. So we're back to the police, who have a monumental job to do essentially protecting us from ourselves. Drug and alcohol users usually think they're hurting only themselves, if anyone. Marijuana users think it's a sacrament. The police, if we're lucky, stop the damage before it's done. They might be a bit heavy handed at times and they might not communicate with us the way we'd like, but it's an exceedingly difficult job and I think they're afraid of what we might do, too, especially if we're under the influence. It might not be a lighter we're reaching for. Bill Varuola is 33-year resident of Las Cruces who is employed by the Las Cruces school district as a teacher at the Dona Ana County Juvenile Detention Center. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D