Pubdate: Tue, 30 May 2006 Source: Ladysmith-Chemanius Chronicle (CN BC) Copyright: 2006 BC Newspaper Group & New Media Contact: http://www.ladysmithchronicle.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1279 Author: John Anderson Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v06/n672/a03.html SCARE TACTICS WON'T STOP TEEN DRUG USE Editor, By doing a little research, Ron Waller would do well to answer his own question: "Haven't we learned anything from the '60s drug culture?" (May 23 Chronicle). According to regular surveys with youth on the topic, fewer young people are using illicit drugs, smoking cigarettes and, for that matter, having children out of wedlock than did their parents in the 1960s. Ron can write me for a list of educational materials. And if youth are to learn anything about drugs, please don't look to Mr. Waller for answers. He claims that someone can be addicted to methamphetamine after using it once. Yeah, yeah we heard that one before, but it was LSD and cocaine when we got it from adults in the '60s. The instant addiction claim is part of the growing moral panic developing around meth. Hey Ron, I too lived through the 1960's and was deeply immersed in the drug subculture that you complain about. Here's what I learned. LSD was the horror drug of the day. We tried it and found it too frightening to have fun except in the most controlled situations. It did not make us jump out of windows or slit our wrists like the televangelists and anti-drug crusaders were predicting. Most of us gave it up after one or two experiences. Cocaine always left us wondering why we actually paid money for the paranoia, sleeplessness and poverty brought on by the drug. Nobody I knew ever became addicted, even with fairly consistent use, and despite a huge drop in price and increase in purity in the late 1980s. Our pot smoking lasted from the teen years into our early twenties. Just about everyone who smoked pot gave it up at just about the same time they found careers, wives and children. Very few continue to smoke cannabis today, but the ones I know are successful in their working and family lives. Moderation seems to be the key. Our best message to youth is to let them know what we know today, rather than relying on old stories intended to scare them into conformity. Tobacco, not methamphetamine, is the deadliest drug in Canada. It has a low price, a legitimate corporate trafficking network, and is routinely sold to minors. It will kill 40,000 Canadians this year, compared with a dozen or so who will die from the effects of crystal meth. The so-called lessons of the '60s drug culture have little to offer our youth. Maybe that's why they're not listening. John Anderson Ladysmith - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin