Pubdate: Thu, 10 Dec 2015 Source: Bundaberg News Mail (Australia) Copyright: 2015 The Bundaberg Newspaper Company Pty Limited Contact: http://www.news-mail.com.au/contact/feedback/ Website: http://www.news-mail.com.au/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/657 Author: Dieter Moeckel WAR ON DRUGS FAILING SO 'ICE' is an epidemic. In 2013 it was established that less than 7% of Australians over the age of 14 years had used methamphetamine at least once in the past year. Methamphetamine first synthesized from ephedrine in 1918 (and amphetamines synthesized in 1888) were used during the Second World War o enhance endurance during long range bomber flights. Servicemen often believed it was bromide to suppress their libido. Truckies used amphetamines to combat fatigue and increase alertness. Today, amphetamines are still used medically to treat narcolepsy (a sleep disorder) and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). Recreational users use amphetamines to increase their sense of wellbeing and exhilaration, and to reduce fatigue. Deaths from overdose or dehydration are a direct result of ignorance of dose, time before the drugs take effect and impurities as supplied by an uncontrolled black market. Recent methamphetamine deaths can be shafted home to the Australian governments. No government, no matter how repressive, has yet been able to enforce non-violent personal behaviour laws as 'Prohibition' so vividly demonstrates. It is time to end the drug war and its nonsensical attempt at moral social control. Drugs are not evil. The social problems faced by a free society is not recreational drug use but drug prohibition. Legalization and government oversight of dose, purity, manufacture and supply accompanied by rigorously honest, genuine, factual education will save many more lives than the obscenely hysterical and hypocritical war on drugs. Harm minimisation such as drug testing and needle exchange admit that the war on drugs is a failure. As do the generally lenient penalties of a few hundred dollars for possession of marijuana when the draconian drug laws allow a maximum penalty of imprisonment for 25 years for possession of a dangerous drug i.e. marijuana. We need to give credence to the words of Albert Einstein when he said, "Nothing, is more destructive of respect for government and the law of the land than passing laws which cannot be enforced." DIETER MOECKEL Wonbah - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom