Pubdate: Wed, 14 Apr 1999 Source: Idaho Statesman, The (ID) Copyright: 1999 The Idaho Statesman Contact: http://www.idahostatesman.com/ A LOOK AT DRUGS DURING MENTAL HEALTH MONTH April is Mental Health Month, a perfect time to discuss legal medications creating victims out of clients and illegal medications creating a police state. Gov. Dirk Kempthorne has focused on children. A couple of months ago we had thefts of Ritalin from Boise schools. At one time we had nearly 10 percent of our children on Ritalin. Are we drugging our children to replace our attention and discipline? It's called Attention Deficit Disorder. I would suggest it's the adults' deficit of attention toward the children. We have one-fifth of Idaho's families impacted by mental illness. Is this diagnoses-mania or reality? The neuroleptic drugs being given for schizophrenia, Prozac and related drugs for depression and others including benzodiazepines for anxiety disorders all are mind-altering . Lobotomy is now back in vogue, it's now called cingulotomy and uses lasers rather than knives, and both are called psychosurgery. For a primer on these issues read "Toxic Psychiatry" and associated books by Dr. Peter Breggin. For children as well as adults, there are non-medicinal approaches which include nutrition and behavioral therapies surrounded by emotional support. Do we want a society of victims or responsible adults? An example of this wave of the future is Idaho's own Children of Hope Family Hospital Inc. Cocaine, heroin and opium all were initially given as doctor-prescribed painkillers and were initiated on U.S. Army soldiers. Their addictive qualities became known and then more modern addictive drugs were prescribed. Today many live in physical pain and because of our abhorrence of these relatively natural addictive drugs, these ill persons live their lives in constant pain. I am not a user of drugs; I rarely drink coffee. Yes, caffeine, nicotine and alcohol are drugs - all physiology altering substances. Prohibition was the Noble Experiment. It worked in decreasing alcohol consumption and alcohol's consequences. By 1960, alcohol consumption was still only one-quarter per capita what it was in 1918. It failed in that it created the police state's expansion. Both the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms and the FBI grew and still grow through the government's war on (alcohol) drugs. Is marijuana worse than alcohol? Marijuana is being used by many as a painkiller and a treatment for glaucoma. Marijuana is primarily illegal because its non-THC cousin hemp was a strong competitor against other textile industries including cotton and the DuPont's synthetic fibers. Presidents Washington and Jefferson were hemp growers. The problem is that hemp fiber manufacture was labor intensive, but even this was being solved in the 1940s. The war on drugs is creating vast organized crime just like Prohibition. The war on drugs is expanding our police state just like Prohibition. The war on drugs is trampling on our Bill of Rights just like Prohibition. This needs to be an open debate, not an emotionally charged one. Criminals need to be punished and victims given restitution. Shouldn't those who use our social services for their "addictions" be punished and taxpaying citizens be given restitution? I am 100 percent behind the Enough is Enough campaign. People need to get high off of life, not by any artificial means. Schools and government may be information providers. Churches need to lead the way. Illegal substances may have benefits. Legal substances may be harmful. Buyer beware. Alan Stroud is a pastor and counselor and lives in Eagle. - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck