269 lines
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269 lines
14 KiB
Plaintext
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From: govegan@uclink.berkeley.edu (Scott Andrew Selby)
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Newsgroups: talk.politics.drugs
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Subject: WHY DRUG FREE? (pamphlet)
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Date: 14 Apr 1994 21:41:26 GMT
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Message-ID: <2okda6$8kt@agate.berkeley.edu>
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This is a new essay to try to explain the various issues involved
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with drug consumption. Please e-mail comments on this to me as I
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am going to do another draft of it. Both positive and negative
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feedback is appreciated (but please be constructive). For a hard
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copy to pass out, send a SASE to the address listed at the end of
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this file. Thanks.
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-------------------------------------------------------------------
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WHY DRUG-FREE?
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Personal and Political Responsibility in Daily Life
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Recreational drug use is one of the most widespread and
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destructive habits facing us today. Much like other matters of
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lifestyle, drug use is not contained entirely within either the private
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or the public realm, but lies somewhere in between. The
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ramifications of the purchase and consumption of a beer and a
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cigarette include, for instance, not only obvious harm to the
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consumers body, but also tacit financial support of the political
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causes to which the given alcohol/tobacco corporation contributes,
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often right-wing in nature. The successful election campaigns of
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North Carolina Senator Jesse Helms in 1984 and 1990, for
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example, were both funded in large part by profits from the alcohol
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and tobacco industries, of which the right-wing congressman has
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been an ardent supporter.1 There is an element of irony in this; the
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drugs that are used in the name of youthful rebellion end up
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benefiting the extreme-right<68> against which the rebellion claims to
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be pitted in the first place.
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From a health/social perspective things look even worse.
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While political setbacks can in the end be overcome, nothing can
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be done to bring back the four-hundred thousand people who die
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in the United States as a result of cigarette consumption alone
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every year, during which hundreds of thousands more fall victim to
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other alcohol- and other drug-related deaths.
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HEALTH
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Perhaps the most obvious argument against drug use is the
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tremendous toll recreational drugs take on the human body.
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Cigarettes have been conclusively shown to cause lung cancer;
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cancer of the pharynx, larynx, esophagus, bladder, and pancreas;
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chronic bronchitis; peptic ulcers; emphysema; and various birth
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defects (if consumed by a pregnant woman). Alcohol can cause an
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often-fatal cirrhosis of the liver if ingested regularly over a long
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period of time, and use by a pregnant woman can cause birth
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defects. Marijuana cigarettes, often thought to be harmless, cause
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lung-related illnesses at a rate four times that of their tobacco-filled
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bretheren, not to mention their user's lessened ability to
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concentrate on difficult tasks, the chronic consumer's weakened
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short-term memory, impotency for men, and long-term lowered sex-
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drive for all users.2 Consumption of LSD can lead to permanent
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brain damage, including psychosis and death. And underlying
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each drug's long list of individual problems is the fact that almost all
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recreational drugs result in physical dependency (even marijuana,
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commonly thought in mainstream society to only be
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"psychologically" addictive.)3 New drugs continue to be created
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whose long term health affects are not yet known - although
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immediate health-problems have been linked to some, such as the
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draining of spinal fluid by MDMA (Ecstasy).4
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Indeed, those who produce and sell recreational drugs are
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guilty of human rights violations on a grand scale. In the name of
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money and profits, they knowingly promote use of products that
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end hundreds of thousands of lives every year, and harm countless
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others.
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SOCIAL RAMIFICATIONS
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An individual's drug habit has a profound effect upon the
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community of people with which he/she interacts on a daily basis.
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According to government statistics, second hand smoke alone is
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responsible for the deaths of fifty-thousand Americans each year.
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Drunk drivers kill an additional seventy-thousand innocent human
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beings during the same time period. In no uncertain terms this
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amounts to murder. Are profits more important than human lives?
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The answer from the recreational drug business is a resounding
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"Yes!"
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From an inter-personal perspective, it is clear that while
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under the influence of any mind-altering drug, one has decreased
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control of one's actions. This affects both the individual and those
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around him/her. It is often the main factor in occurrences of assault,
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sexual transgressions, domestic violence, and physical abuse in
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general. Date rape is often caused by lessened sexual inhibitions
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brought on by drug consumption. Unfortunately, a complete list of
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social problems exacerbated by drug use is too long to include in a
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pamphlet of this length. Even if one personally has never been a
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perpetrator in a drug-related incident, one is still responsible for
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such occurrences, through drug consumption or support thereof.
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Passivity equals compliance.
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POLITICAL ISSUES
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It is a travesty that while use of illegal drugs is combated,
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consumption of alcohol and tobacco is actively promoted.
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Corporations are even willing to lie in order to increase profits.
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They consistently deny that the products they make and sell are
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dangerous. Cigarette manufacturers, for example, claim that
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cigarettes are neither a threat to the consumer's health nor
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addictive,5 despite scientific proof to the contrary. Even the United
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States government, ostensibly set up to protect the rights of the
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country's citizens, have been promoters of the legal drug industry.
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Indeed it is only a minority of government officials who have been
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fighting the tobacco industry, albeit on a limited scale.
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The federal government is not doing much to stop the public
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health threat caused by alcohol/cigarette consumption because the
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major corporations have the United States Congress in shackles,
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which take the form of gifts, contributions, and campaign funds.6 In
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the American South, where tobacco is an important industry,
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congressmen are virtually forced to support the tobacco
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corporations or face expulsion from office come election-time. For
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this reason, federal subsidies exist for tobacco growers that insure
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them a profit on their crops.7 The corporations placate the would-
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be opposition in government with money, which allows them to
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manufacture their harmful products unquestioned.
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The products and their health-hazards, however, are only
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part of the picture. Both in the United States and abroad,
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alcohol/tobacco corporations have been well-known supporters of
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an ultra-conservative political agenda. Indeed, almost all of the
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corporations that manufacture alcohol and cigarettes turn over a
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significant portion of their profits to special-interest groups that
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oppose civil-rights legislation and social programs. The Coors
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corporation, for example, has opposed the U.S. Civil Rights Act,
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affirmative action, the Equal Rights Amendment, U.S. labor unions,
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and has been guilty of severe environmental damage in Colorado.
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Perhaps most conspicuously they are the founders and primary
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financial backers of the Colorado-based Heritage Foundation: an
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anti-Semitic, racist, anti-civil rights, right-wing think tank.8 Coors is
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not alone in its reactionary pursuits. Henry Weinhard's brewery, for
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example, has used profits from beer sales to fund Operation
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Rescue.
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From the perspective of change, drugs only contribute to
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maintaining the status quo. Those who are opposed to the current
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system often believe that there is something rebellious about
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consuming illegal drugs. The reality is that by purchasing and
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consuming drugs, they support the establishment which they
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dislike so much. Their consumption also minimizes the volume of
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their dissent by neutralizing their activist-tendencies. Drug use
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fosters an apathetic environment in which people seek to escape
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the troubled conditions of this world instead of working to change
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them. It is the people who live in the worst conditions, (and thus
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have the greatest need to fight for social change), who most often
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become drug addicts, a fact which explains the high rate of
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alcoholism among the economically-depressed Native Americans,
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and a similarly high percentage of drug use among America's
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urban lower class. This, of course, pleases those who run the
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country: they face no threat of rebellion as long as the
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disenfranchised are busily involved with drugs. In 1989, under
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President George Bush, the government set up a highly-selective
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'War on Drugs', which gave law enforcement officials free reign to
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abuse their authority among society's underclass, all the while
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promoting the use of alcohol and other legal drugs among the
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same sector of society.
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Drug production is a waste of environmental resources. It is
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unnecessary, unsustainable, and often directly damages the
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environment. Food-stuffs, which in sharp contrast are important to
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produce, could be grown on the land used to produce the drugs.
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Residents of Northern California and parts of Hawaii have
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witnessed the virtual destruction of their respective ecosystems
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with the large marijuana crops that have taken over their
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countryside.9 Coca plants (used in cocaine production) litter vast
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tracts of land in Central and South America, as do poppies (used
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for heroin production) in various Asian countries. Tobacco
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production often involves heavy use of wood, burned in order to
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"flue cure" the product. In Eastern Kenya, Pakistan, and heavily-
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forested Brazil, the effects of logging for the purposes of this aspect
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of cigarette production have already been felt. In fact, it is estimated
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that one tree is felled per 300 cigarettes made.10 In addition,
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pollution is created with the production of LSD, cocaine, alcoholic
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beverages, and heroin. The packaging involved for some of these
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substances is often wasteful, especially that of cigarettes, which
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involves throw-away plastic products.
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Problems in the non-industrialized world brought on by legal
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drug corporations as well as illegal drug producers is another
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disturbing consequence of the drug business. Tobacco and alcohol
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are sold to poor people in developing nations often without any
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warnings about negative health-effects, especially horrendous
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given the fact that the cigarettes sold there often contain twice as
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much tar (the main carcinogen in cigarettes) as do those sold in the
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First World.11 Instead of improving their dire conditions, people are
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encouraged to spend what little money they have on products that
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will make them more like members of the industrialized world.
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Cigarettes, for example, are promoted on television and billboards
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as a symbol of progress.12 The reality is that with each drink, puff,
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snort, and injection, the already-slim chance that the third-world
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citizen will ever live in conditions comparable to those of a typical
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first-world counterpart begin to disappear. The drain on financial
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resources caused by a drug habit is magnified in the case of the
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third-world addict. Unfortunately, many of the targeted consumers
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do not have the opportunity to make an informed decision about
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the products that may eventually kill them.
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Legal and illegal drug production in the developing world
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affects not only consumers, but workers as well. They are abused
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by employers, earning very little money picking cash crops, while
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they could instead be making a decent living producing food-stuffs.
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The employers, especially those who manufacture and traffic illegal
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drugs, often resort to violent means of protecting their industry. In
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some countries, most notably Columbia, the result is chaos. With
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the money obtained from selling their cocaine, marijuana, heroin,
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and other drugs, those involved in the drug trade have created a
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climate of corruption and violence throughout the non-
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industrialized world, as they have in many economically depressed
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areas of the developed world.
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ALTERNATIVES
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In the face of a corrupt industry, both in America and abroad,
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people must challenge the idea that illegal drugs should be treated
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separately from alcohol and tobacco, a distinction based upon the
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assumption that only illegal drugs are truly "drugs". This way of
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thinking demonizes illicit drugs and at the same time makes licit
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drugs appear innocuous<75> hiding the fact that there is no real
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difference between the two categories. A prominent proponent of
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the legal/illegal mind-set is the "Partnership for a Drug-Free
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America", which, in fact, is primarily financed by the alcohol and
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tobacco industries. The ideas promoted by this group through print
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and television ads bolster the sales of the legal drug industry's
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products, maintaining a good public image. They operate on the
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assumption that the public is gullible enough to believe that 'drugs
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can't be too bad if they are legal'. Much too often, their strategy has
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worked.
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A change in personal lifestyle can be a slow process, but
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luckily there are many effective methods of ending one's personal
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drug habit. If you are addicted to drugs and want to quit, you can.
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Seek help or counseling if you need it. Build strength to deal with
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issues without needing an escape or depending upon a crutch.
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Develop friendships that do not depend on sharing drugs to be
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able to relate to one another. Make a life-long commitment to
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yourself and the world to live drug-free. By being drug-free, one
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boycotts both the various industries (legal and illegal) that produce
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drugs as well as the actual concept of drug-taking. Awareness and
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a change in personal lifestyle are both essential to effecting
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political change.
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ENDNOTES
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1. (White) pp. 56-69.
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2. UC Berkeley Tang Medical Health Center.
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3. ibid.
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4. ibid.
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5. Tobacco Institute: (phone interview, April 1994).
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6. (White) pp. 45-71.
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7. (Whelan) p147.
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8. (Bellant).
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9. Humboldt County (CA) Chamber of Commerce (phone interview,
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April 1994).
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10. (Whelan) p172.
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11. ibid. p170.
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12. ibid. p169.
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SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY/BOOKS TO READ
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Booze Merchants: The Inebriating of America M Jacobson, R.
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Atkins, G. Hacker. CSPI Books, Washington D.C. 1983
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Coors Connection R.Bellant. Political Research Associates,
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Cambridge MA 1990 (Bellant)
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Merchants of Death- The American Tobacco Industry L.C. White.
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Beech Tree Books, New York, NY 1988 (White)
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Smoking Gun: How the Tobacco Industry Gets Away With Murder
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E.M. Whelan. George F. Stickley Co. Philadelphia PA 1984
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(Whelan)
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Ask a local librarian for help inter-library borrowing these
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books or books on quitting specific substances. Please photocopy
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and distribute this pamphlet. For more information or if you want to
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help, send a self-addressed stamped envelope to:
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Ideal For Living
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PO Box 4353
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Berkeley CA 94704-0353
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