Pubdate: Fri, 11 Jan 2013 Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC) Copyright: 2013 The Vancouver Sun Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/letters.html Website: http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/477 Author: Ian Mulgrew ECSTASY PLAY MORE PROPAGANDA THAN EDUCATION The Real-Life Villain Isn't The Drug Itself, But The Failure Of Criminal Prohibition A well-meaning play by Burnaby high-schoolers on the perils of ecstasy reveals what is wrong with letting police priorities turn drug education into War-on- Drugs propaganda. Although the play, titled Russian Roulette, is billed as "a production by students, for students," the executive producer was the justice ministry, which contributed $ 24,000 to the project, and the directing hand was the Burnaby RCMP. The kids, as a result, appear to have guilelessly created a 21st- century stage version of Reefer Madness, using ecstasy in place of marijuana in their morality play. Just as pot was demonized in the much-ridiculed 1936 film, originally called Tell Your Children, so ecstasy is vilified as some kind of killer drug. Material distributed in conjunction with the performances hyperbolically warns "there is no safe dose of ecstasy." None of the University College of the Fraser Valley eggheads who wrote the pamphlet saw the 25 Brits consuming ecstasy in the name of science last fall on television, I guess. That show demonstrated what the pure substance known as MDMA does to the brain in an "attempt to tell the truth about the effects of the recreational drug." The Justice Ministry funded this proposal from the RCMP and Burnaby school district in response to a spate of deaths associated with adulterated ecstasy. It is essentially a new version of taking kids to the penitentiary or the morgue to scare them straight, featuring the sobering and heart- rending emergency call made by slumber-party friends of Abbotsford teen Cheryl McCormack, who fatally overdosed. Such tragedy is moving, but the message it conveys is muddy, unfocused and often unhelpful. It doesn't tell you much about ecstasy or the Gordian Knot that prevents society from forging a sensible, evidence-based drug policy. While I haven't seen Russian Roulette, the play as described by Lori Culbert on the front page of The Vancouver Sun Thursday does not mention the Big Picture problems, the potential medical benefits of the drug or the campaign against the present prohibitionist approach by the province's four previous attorneys general and numerous others. David Nutt, president of the British Neuroscience Association and former scientific adviser to the U. K. government on the dangers of drugs, was behind the European television experiment. He says ecstasy has been maligned for political rather than health reasons. The ex-chairman of the country's Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs was sacked in a 2009 row that erupted after he quipped it was safer than riding. In Britain, there's one serious mishap for every 350 horseback riding trips, compared to one serious adverse event for every 10,000 ecstasy trips. Nutt's sense of perspective and honesty were not appreciated. Our own provincial officer of health, Perry Kendall, found himself in a similar squeeze last year when he made comparable points. Kendall asserted the risks of ecstasy were wildly exaggerated and that it was lethal only when cooked up by careless and unscrupulous money hungry gangsters. B. C.' s top health official suggested taking pure ecstasy can be "safe" when consumed responsibly by adults. But don't tell that to the federal government, which last March elevated MDMA into the same class as heroin or cocaine in spite of the outcry from drug-policy reform advocates who said it would not curb its availability or use but instead play into the hands of organized crime and put kids at greater risk. Like Nutt, Kendall immediately came under fire for trying to promote a datadriven discussion - that potential risks associated with ecstasy are infinitesimal compared to the damage wrought by crooks making and selling it without quality, dosage or other controls. But you won't hear any of that in Russian Roulette, whose anachronistic intent is as transparent as its tropes are cheesy. High school students deserve to be given a realistic understanding of drug use and the scope and cost of drug abuse, not indoctrinated with the discredited, old-fashioned view that a complicated public policy and health problem is solved by just saying no. The true villain in the real-life drama about how to legislate what adults are allowed to consume isn't ecstasy or any other substance. It's the failed criminal prohibition whose victims are legion and that has made such drugs more accessible to youth than tobacco or alcohol and exposed them to a caveat emptor marketplace regulated by unspeakable violence. No one on British TV had more than a bit of emotional discomfort after taking clinically produced ecstasy. No one died. The cutting-edge research dispelled some of the myths around the drug and let ordinary people in on the hope that MDMA may be an answer for millions of people who suffer from depression, anxiety and post- traumatic stress disorder. Now that's educational. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D