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- Ecstasy in the UK:
- recreational drug use and cultural change
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- by
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- Peter McDermott, Alan Matthews,
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- "Whoever it was brought house music and Ecstasy together is
- a total genius and I want to shake that man's hand".
- Anonymous, The Face, Nov. 1991
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- Acknowledgements
- The authors would like to apologize unreservedly to S-Expressa,
- Bob Dylanb, E-Zee Possec, Diana Ross and the Supremesd and the
- Jimmy Castor Bunche for the cavalier misappropriation of their
- lyrics, and thank Michele Durkin and Jenny O'Connor for their
- invaluable work on the Chill Out information campaign, and for
- their staunch support during the media's ferocious attack upon
- Mersey Drug Training and Information Centre and it's director, Pat
- O'Hare.
-
- Introduction - 'You can be yourself'
-
- MDMA is a member of the phenylethylamine family of drugs, related
- chemically to both mescaline and amphetamine. Consequently, it is
- often described as a stimulant and/or an hallucinogenic, when in
- actual fact, it is neither. Subjective reports advise us that on
- an active dose of the drug there is no loss of control or contact
- with reality. The primary effect is on mood. The structural
- activity of this drug is so different from others that, it has
- been argued, the drug deserves a new category (Nichols,1986).
- Terms that have been suggested to describe this category include
- 'empathogen' (from the drug's capacity to evoke a sense of
- empathy) and 'entactogen' (from the Latin, meaning 'to touch
- within').
-
- The first reference to MDMA to reach a broad audience in the UK,
- came in an article in a magazine called 'The Face'. This reported
- on the use of the drug by a small group of people working in the
- media, pop music and fashion industries, who were flying to the
- United States and importing small amounts of the drug for their
- personal consumption. (Nasmyth, 1985)
-
- Over the next two years, the MDMA scene grew slowly but steadily.
- Two London disc jockeys visited Ibiza in the summer of 1986 and
- returned with a new style of dance music - created by the DJ's
- themselves - which became known as 'Balearic Beat' (Kaplan, C. et
- al, 1989). The music consisted of a mixture of late seventies and
- early eighties disco, and the later mutations of that nightclub
- oriented sound from Chicago (House) New York (Garage) and Detroit
- (Techno). Using modern musical technology such as samplers,
- sequencers and synthesisers, DJ's began to create a new musical
- form that clubgoers found ideally suited the effects of the drug.
- The Ecstasy/nightclub combination began to spread slowly from the
- London fashion/music industry elite, until 1991, when the rave
- scene (as the subculture became known) was possibly the biggest
- youth subculture that Britain had ever seen. A subculture
- intimately bound up with the use of Ecstasy.
-
- The effects of the drug were to become closely bound up in the
- artefacts of the newly emerging subculture. For instance, one song
- that was widely played in the clubs in 1989 was called, 'Express
- Yourself' and gives some insight into the meaning of the
- experience for young people. The hook lyric proclaims "You can be
- yourself, yeah, yeah". Although this may seem trite to those who
- have not shared the experience, most of the people we interviewed
- felt that this capacity to drop one's inhibitions and allow
- yourself to be who you truly were without fear or embarrassment,
- was the drug's most rewarding quality. While other drugs like
- alcohol or LSD produced dramatic changes in the psyche, Ecstasy,
- in contrast, just allowed people to be themselves, to accept
- themselves and others. This curious sense of freedom arising from
- a collective of chemically liberated individuals made the club
- scene very appealing, not just to teenagers but to people of all
- ages. When the drug was taken in a club with 2,000 other people,
- it produces a sense of being emotionally synchronised with the
- crowd, a notion that is amplified by the DJ's use of the music and
- lighting effects. People would describe how they would make eye
- contact, and rather than looking away embarrassed, or being a
- catalyst for aggression ("Who the fuck d'you think you're looking
- at?") strangers would identify a communality, albeit one based
- upon chemistry.
-
- So, from 1987 onwards, nightclubs across the UK witnessed joyous
- outbursts of mass hugging and kissing. A popular record would be
- received by 2,000 pairs of arms shooting up into the air, as
- everybody would hold hands, sway blissfully and sing. Given the
- contrast with our everyday experience, it is not surprising that
- the experience of the drug and the scene was to become of central
- importance to the lives of many young people.
-
-
-
- Something is happening here, but you don't know what it
- is....
-
- The first two authors became involved with this phenomenon at the
- end of 1988, when they gained access to a network of young people
- who were involved with the drug. They spent a great deal of time
- over the following two years studying this group and the rave
- scene, research which eventually led to the production of a
- television film "E is for Ecstasy" (Everyman, BBC 1, 1992)
-
- During the course of this research, they became aware of a growing
- number of problems associated with the drug. Having read most of
- the published literature available on the drug, it appeared to be
- fairly safe. However, the set and setting in which the drug was
- used in the USA, where most of the available research had been
- conducted, was very different from the way it was now being used
- in Britain.
-
- In America, the drug had come to the attention of a small group of
- people who were committed to the continuation of serious research
- into psychedelic drugs (Shulgin & Shulgin, 1992; Stephens, 1977).
- Because of MDMA's peculiar properties, this group had seen the
- drug as a useful adjunct to psychotherapy and for a long time it
- remained a well kept secret. Although the drug eventually made the
- transition from the therapists office and onto the street, the way
- it was used in the USA, and the groups that were using it, were
- very different to this new pattern of use that was emerging in the
- UK. (Rosenbaum, & Morgan, 1989; Beck, 1990; O'Rourke, 1985.)
-
- In 1989, the UK saw it's first Ecstasy-related death. Although the
- first was believed to be an idiosyncratic reaction, possibly
- allergic, as the numbers of people taking the drug grew, the
- numbers of adverse reactions also grew. This research combined
- with the growing number of telephone enquiries to MDTIC, pointed
- to a hunger for information on the effects and the hazards of
- Ecstasy and the other drugs associated with the dance scene. In
- September 1991, Mersey Regional Health Authority decided to
- commission an information campaign aimed at Ecstasy users
- (McDermott, P. et.al.,1992)
-
- At the time the campaign was conceived, there had been virtually
- no interest in the drug by the medical or drug treatment
- establishment in the UK, and no research of any substance had been
- funded or conducted. Apart from the American research, which was
- conducted under very different use conditions, all the experience
- of the effects and hazards of this drug lay with the hundreds of
- thousands of users who had been conducting individual and
- collective experiments with the drug. A series of government
- funded television 'drug scare' advertisements had been screened in
- 1989-1990 and most of the Ecstasy users we spoke to had seen them
- but they did not find them credible representations of the drug,
- the subculture, or the potential risks. Most of those interviewed
- did not believe that their drug use had caused them any serious
- problems, though they often felt that the lack of accurate
- information about the drug, and its illegal status, were problems
- in themselves (McDermott & Matthews, 1992).
-
- Furthermore, current drugs services had been preoccupied with
- their existing clients, opiate users, and most had totally failed
- to make any attempt to contact this group. In fact, many involved
- in the drugs field were virtually unaware of the problem. Drug
- services were for 'addicts', whereas this group was just using
- drugs recreationally, at weekends. What did a drugs agency have to
- offer them? The reality was, in fact, not very much. (Gilman,1992)
-
- Everything starts with an 'E'
-
- It was decided that the form that our response would take should
- be different from other such campaigns for a number of reasons.
- Most importantly, it was felt that the people who were most at
- risk, and therefore could benefit most from such a campaign were
- the many thousands of people who were currently using the drug.
- There is no evidence that drug prevention campaigns such as the
- government's TV adverts, delay or reduce initiation into drug use.
- However, information may play a role in slowing transitions to
- heavier or particularly hazardous modes of use. (Dorn & Murji,
- 1992).
-
- The new club-drug scene had a number of characteristics that make
- it a risk-laden situation. First, many of those involved are young
- and are new to drug taking, therefore they are likely to have
- little knowledge of the drugs that they use. Second, the dominant
- drug used on this scene, MDMA or Ecstasy, was a relatively new
- substance that most drugs workers had little knowledge of or
- experience of dealing with. Our perspective on the problem, and
- the strategy that we adopted in order to deal with it, owed a
- great deal to the work of Norman Zinberg and Jock Young.
-
- From Zinberg, we took the notion that we had to accept that these
- people were determined to use drugs, and as a consequence, we
- needed to assist them by facilitating the emergence of a culture
- of controlled drug use (Zinberg, 1984). In 'The Drugtakers'
- (Young, 1972), Young claims it is strongly dysfunctional to harass
- and undermine drug subcultures, instead we should facilitate the
- emergence of a system of values and norms within that subculture.
- He argues for 'positive propaganda' about drugs. Most drug horror
- stories fail to mesh with the experience of drug users, and so
- their message is rejected. It is only the subculture of drug
- taking, Young believes, that has the authority to control its
- members. As he so eloquently explains, "You cannot control an
- activity merely by shouting out that it is forbidden; you must
- base your measures on facts and these facts must come from sources
- that are valued by the people that you wish to influence. (...)
- Moreover, information aimed at controlling drug use must be
- phrased in terms of the values of the subculture, not in terms of
- the values of the outside world. (p.221)"
-
- Following Young and Zinberg then, we decided that the best method
- of affecting a positive influence upon this group of recreational
- or non-dependent drug users would be to seek to facilitate the
- emergence of a set of subcultural rituals and norms aimed at
- minimising the potential for drug-related harm.
-
- A combination of our field research and an extensive literature
- review led us to conclude that the potential problems associated
- with MDMA could be divided into three categories - drug specific,
- situational and social. Problems derived from the pharmacological
- properties of the drug include overdose, allergic or idiosyncratic
- reactions, anxiety or panic attacks and the possibility of long-
- term neurotoxicity. Situational problems ... those related to the
- user's mind set, and the setting in which the drug is taken,
- include dehydration, hyperthermia, exhaustion, panic, anxiety and
- problems arising from counterfeit drugs. To date there have been
- at least 14 deaths in the UK associated with Ecstasy and as many
- as 50 other severe reactions. One popular hypothesis is that
- these deaths are caused by heat-stroke due to a combination of
- Ecstasy, dancing energetically, not drinking enough water and the
- hot and humid temperature in clubs.(Henry et al., 1992)
-
- Finally, use of the drug can also give rise to a number of social
- problems that encompass relations with family, school or work, the
- law, and possible personality changes, but the extent to which
- these should be considered as 'drug problems', rather than normal
- adolescent rites of passage is arguable and often depends upon
- highly subjective criteria.
-
- As an information service, the problem we faced was how to make a
- positive intervention that would enable us to maximise contact in
- an appropriate manner, and to allocate scarce resources as
- efficiently as possible. As the government had recently run an
- enormous mass media campaign aimed at dissuading young people from
- using recreational drugs like Ecstasy, we decided to run an
- information campaign aimed specifically at those who were
- determined to continue to use these drugs.
-
- Reach out and touch somebody's hand....
-
- Following intense press coverage of the issue after several
- Ecstasy-related deaths over a short space of time, many drug
- services began to argue that outreach work should be conducted
- with this group. We felt that this response was a mistake.
- Outreach work in the UK emerged in an attempt to contact injecting
- drug users at risk of HIV. It was an exceptional measure that was
- necessitated by the need to avert a public health crisis. Ravers
- are neither hard-to-reach, nor are they such a priority.(1)
- Outreach seemed to be unreasonably intrusive in the perceptions of
- the targeted group, just another form of social policing. If the
- rationale for such work is reducing drug-related harm or HIV
- prevention, then such efforts may be more profitably directed to
- the local pub, where both the extent and the severity of risks and
- problems will far outweigh those at any rave club. Few would argue
- that such a response to alcohol was either appropriate or
- desirable - why should we think it so for other drugs?
-
- One drugs agency manager in the Mersey region explained his
- understanding of this trend towards outreach work among
- recreational drug users: "For the last few years, the role of an
- outreach worker has been to go and sit in a grotty council flat
- and try to make contact with injectors. Compared to this, going to
- clubs at the weekend has got to be a high priority. And it's
- easier, too. In a club, you have access to up to two thousand drug
- users, all in the same place at the same time.(Dalton, 1991)"
-
- If the concept of outreach work is fraught with inconsistencies,
- the management of such work poses serious logistical problems.
- Counselling or information giving in a club where you can't hear
- yourself think, is inappropriate and virtually impossible. Dealing
- with collapse or overdose should be the responsibility of club
- management, who should have staff experienced in first aid and who
- are just as able to call an ambulance as any outreach worker. When
- dealing with anxiety or panic attacks (the bad trip syndrome),
- friends are more likely to be helpful than strangers. Most clubs
- already sell condoms. As drugs workers, our primary aim is to help
- prevent problems, not have workers waiting on the sidelines in the
- hope that one might develop. Our task is to demystify drugs and
- drug problems, to take power out of the hands of professionals and
- to empower the drug user, enabling him to make responsible and
- informed decisions. Outreach work is too often used as a method of
- perpetuating professional mystique and client dependency on drugs
- workers rather than transferring decision making skills to drug
- users who can best understand their own needs.
-
- ...make this world a better place...
-
- When determining the form and content of the campaign, we set
- ourselves a number of goals -
-
- 1. To provide basic information on the effects of the various
- drugs commonly used on the club scene.
- 2. To enable clubgoers to identify potential problems that might
- arise, and help them to deal with them effectively.
- 3. To alert them to hazards associated with the set and setting in
- which the drug may be used.
- 4. To establish standards for safer, more responsible drug use
- within the drug sub-culture.
- 5. To give drug users a contact point for further information from
- a source they can trust, should problems arise.
-
- In order to achieve these aims, we felt that the form in which the
- information took, and the routes through which it was transmitted,
- were equally as important as the content. The information should
- be pertinent to the lives and interests of the intended audience.
- It must also be accurate and honest, reflecting the positive
- aspects of drug use as well as the risks and harms that the drug
- might cause. Finally, the campaign needed to be non-judgmental
- about the ethical issues inherent in drug use in order to
- establish a relationship of trust between the information
- providers and the intended recipients.
-
- As the budget for the campaign was low, we needed to take a
- creative approach to maximising our audience. Once again, our in-
- depth knowledge of the subculture gained over the previous two
- years was invaluable. This was a subculture which was based around
- holding illegal parties that were not advertised but could attract
- over 10,000 people by word of mouth. We decided to attempt to
- utilise the methods and networks that the subculture itself uses
- to transmit information ... flyers, magazine articles and word of
- mouth.
-
- Flyers are hand-outs that advertise the opening of new clubs or
- one-off parties. They usually feature a graphic design style that
- is identifiable with the culture, similar to the graphics
- associated with the hippie/underground subculture of the 1960s.
- Flyers are distributed outside clubs, in record shops, clothes
- shops and other places where ravers congregate. They are often
- collected by ravers, who pin them on bedroom walls and in
- scrapbooks as memorabilia and mementos of events or clubs they
- attended. A local designer, noted for his creative work in this
- area, was employed to produce a leaflet that would utilise
- elements of this form.
-
- The leaflet, "Chill Out ... A Ravers Guide", contained basic
- information about the three main drugs that are used on the club
- scene, MDMA, LSD and amphetamine. It considers the risks involved
- in using those drugs, methods to try to minimise the risks, and
- how to deal with an emergency. Furthermore, the leaflet does not
- just focus upon the drugs, but also looks at the other issues
- involved - the need for sleep and good diet, avoiding dehydration,
- heat exhaustion etc. Finally, a phone number was available on the
- leaflet in case further help was required.
-
- As the nature of club culture mitigates against passing out such
- detailed information in a venue where people have gone to dance
- and to enjoy themselves, this method of distribution was rejected.
- If handed out willy-nilly during such an event, we felt that most
- would be likely to end up littering the floor, unread. Rather than
- leaving these behind the desk at drug services, places that are
- rarely attended by this group, we distributed them initially
- through specialist record and clothes shops, and through
- advertisements in fanzines, on radio and in bars, cafes and clubs.
-
- Our resources were limited to an initial print run of 10,000
- copies of the leaflet, therefore we could only distribute them
- throughout the region. Yet the need for information on this matter
- was felt to be increasingly pressing, as the number of deaths and
- hospitalisations across the country mounted. As yet, no other
- service was providing the information that was needed. In an
- attempt to remedy this information shortage and contact a much
- larger audience, the second component of the ampaign was
- initiated. One of the authors approached the magazine that had
- carried the original article on MDMA in 1985, "The Face". This
- magazine is the most prestigious of the so-called ╘style
- magazines'. Aimed at a readership aged between 18 and 35, the
- magazine sells all over the world and has managed to successfully
- remain ahead of all the others because of it's ability to have the
- finger on the pulse of fashion and pop music. It's credibility
- with young people is probably unrivalled by any other magazine.
- Continued references to Ecstasy, both in features on "stars", in
- letters and in journalistic asides led us to believe that this
- would be an ideal conduit for a carefully targeted media
- information campaign.
-
- After negotiations, the magazine published an interview with one
- of the authors and a visiting Dutch colleague who had recently
- finished a book on the Dutch Ecstasy scene. The piece attempted to
- summarise the most recent scientific information that was
- available on the drug for a lay audience (James,1991).
- Confirmation that our choice of this magazine was correct was
- revealed by the response that the piece generated. The following
- month's issue gave the whole letters page over to the topic and
- noted that the article attracted the most mail that they had for
- some time (The Face, 1991a). Many readers letters noted the
- phenomenal rise in the incidence of Ecstasy use, others identified
- MDMA related problems that they or their friends were
- experiencing, problems hitherto not addressed by existing drug
- service provision.
-
- Over the following six months, virtually all of the British
- magazines aimed at this youth audience carried similar articles,
- often focusing on Chill Out and a similar information campaign run
- by Lifeline, a Manchester drugs agency that was based on a cartoon
- character, Peanut Pete. Given the volume of useful coverage of the
- issues, in the type of magazines that were read by our target
- audience, we felt that our initiative was far more successful than
- we could have ever anticipated.
-
- ....if you can!
-
- Over the past four years, British television and the quality
- newspapers have given a great deal of coverage to the 'new
- paradigm' in the drugs field. TV programmes like Granada's
- "Hooked' series and the BBC's Open Space programme, 'Taking Drugs
- Seriously' are just two examples among many. Most serious
- newspaper columnists and editorials are now critical of the War on
- Drugs mentality and often argue in favour of a more pragmatic,
- harm reduction approach.
-
- However, this tendency towards realism by the media still only
- applies to the quality broadsheets and television, and has failed
- to filter through to the British tabloids, who still cover drug
- stories in the traditional shock-horror fashion. In an article
- titled "The myth of drug takers in the mass media" (Young, 1973)
- Jock Young has pointed out that the media's portrayal of drug
- stories is consistently biased. This bias is not a function of
- random ignorance on the part of journalists(2), but is grounded in
- the media's assumption of a consensual ideology that governs the
- writing of newspaper articles. Most drug stories rely upon a
- number of myths, myths that were identified and shown to be untrue
- as early as 1940 by the American pioneer of Harm Reduction,
- sociologist Alfred Lindesmith (Lindesmith, 1940). These myths are
- rooted in moral indignation, and are aimed at bulwarking the
- hypothetical world of the normal citizen and blinkering the
- audience to deviant realities that exist outside this imaginary
- consensus. In order to understand why newspaper stories about drug
- issues are systematically skewed, Young argues that one must seek
- explanations at a structural level. The way in which certain
- sections of the media attacked 'Chill Out' provides a powerful
- validation of Young's thesis.
-
- The first author was contacted by a journalist on a local paper,
- the Liverpool Echo, who wanted to know where the information in
- the leaflet came from. In fact, the information was a summary of
- all the available literature on the subject, and had been read and
- approved by a number of leading experts both on MDMA and on drug
- education. Locally, it was read and approved by the Director of
- the Drug Dependency Unit, the Head of Merseyside Police drug squad
- and other interested professionals. The journalist did not appear
- to be impressed by this, and intimated that some people in the
- field were concerned by the content of the leaflet. We later
- discovered that the concern emanated from her editor who had been
- outraged by the leaflet and had ordered her to get a critical
- story.
-
- We were contacted by colleagues in the field who informed us that
- this journalist had been ringing around in an attempt to find
- somebody prepared to condemn the leaflet. Apparently, nobody
- working in the drugs field was prepared to do so but, fortunately
- for the reporter, there was a general election due in a few months
- time, and Merseyside happens to be a solid Labour stronghold. The
- newspaper eventually managed to generate a controversy by sending
- copies of the leaflet to two Conservative MP's, both in marginal
- seats and asking for their comments.
-
- The item ran as the main story on page one, under the headline,
- "Raving Mad: MP's fury over DIY drug brochure for teenagers."
- (Liverpool Echo, 28th January, 1992)
-
- "The Echo today highlights a glossy drugs leaflet that every
- Merseyside parent will view with outrage. It is a youngster's
- guide to taking drugs that looks and reads like part of a sales
- brochure."
-
- Linda Chalker, MP for Wallasey, attacked the leaflet for it's
- message. "Instead of hammering home the message that drugs are
- wrong and drugs kill, they are taking the soft option and telling
- these children how to take them safely." Her colleague, Ken Hind
- MP, went even further. "This is a disgraceful waste of public
- funds. I shall today send a letter to the Chairman of Mersey
- Regional Health Authority demanding such funding is immediately
- withdrawn."
-
- The following day, the story was picked up by two tabloid
- newspapers, The Sun and The Daily Star.(3) The Daily Star's story
- ran under the headline "What a Dope: Daft do-gooder tells kids
- it's OK to use killer drug." (Daily Star, 29th January, 1992) The
- Star also gave it's editorial over to the issue, offering advice
- to Merseyside parents. "...this evil twaddle was written by Centre
- boss Pat O'Hare and his staff - local parents should find out
- where these oddballs hang out and then they should storm the place
- and dump all 20,000 copies of this pernicious pamphlet into the
- Mersey, followed by Mr O'Hare."
-
- The Sun, the newspaper that introduced the 'page 3 girl' to the
- British public, retained it's usual obsession with sex. The front
- page story was headlined "Fury at sex guide to E" (The Sun, 29th
- January, 1992), because of a single reference to sex in the
- leaflet that was aimed at raising awareness of HIV risk among this
- group. In fact, the leaflet read, "Sometimes you feel horny as it
- (MDMA) heightens sensations and pleasures of touch ... so have
- condoms with you."
-
- This national media interest led the Echo to devote it's front
- page to the story for the next two evenings. The following night's
- story was titled "Rethink on drug guide" and sought to imply that
- the regional health authority was about to renounce the leaflet.
- In fact, a health authority spokesperson said "We have no
- immediate plans to withdraw the leaflet." Meanwhile, other
- sections of the media were expressing their support for Chill Out.
- Mick Middles, a columnist on Manchester's counterpart to the Echo,
- the Manchester Evening News (Middles, 1992) wrote:
-
- "The media has universally feigned outrage and plucked a few
- provocative lines from the leaflet. ...It is all to easy for the
- media to take a line out of context and make the whole project
- seem like a celebration of this appalling drug. It isn't. It
- merely accepts the sad fact that many ordinary, intelligent
- teenagers are caught up in this Ecstasy subculture and takes it
- from there. The authority should be commended for attempting to
- reach the kids via this method."
-
- This support was also echoed in the Liverpool Echo's sister
- newspaper, the Daily Post (Daily Post, 3rd February 1992), where
- columnist David Charters wrote:
-
- "Admittedly, it is a defeatist tract, taking the line: the problem
- is here to stay. How do we cope with it. ...Most of the
- information is reasoned. The passage saying "Ecstasy can make you
- feel relaxed but energetic, happy, calm, exhilarated warm and
- loving" is too glowing, though it is balanced with references to
- sweating, nausea and vomiting. (...) Until the authorities control
- the spread of drugs, the MDTIC's leaflet has a role."
-
- On the third evening, the Echo gave its front page over to the
- story once again, for the third night running, this time to report
- that the Home Secretary, Kenneth Baker had withdrawn a ú15,000
- grant to MDTIC from the seized assets fund that was intended to
- fund an Ecstasy information campaign. The grant was frozen until
- after the general election (Liverpool Echo, 30th January 1992).
-
- By this time, staff on the Liverpool Echo had begun to sense that
- their stance was not only out of step with professional opinion,
- but also with public opinion. In local radio phone-ins and on
- television news vox-pop interviews, support for Chill Out was
- overwhelming, particularly among the young, who the leaflet was
- aimed at. In the same issue, the Echo gave the centre's director
- Pat O'Hare, and the leaflet's author, Alan Matthews, space to
- defend their position.
-
- The following week it gave its letters page over to the issue
- (Liverpool Echo, 4th February, 1992). Again, public support was
- overwhelming. Of sixteen letters, only three did not support the
- leaflet. The letters give an insight into the level of public
- awareness of and support for the harm reduction philosophy.
-
- "As the Echo pointed out, the drug trade in the North West reaps
- profits of ú25 million. This will not be halted overnight.
- Obviously there must be a demand."
- "I am writing as the concerned parent of a 19 year old son to
- comment on your front page report, "Raving Mad". The most accurate
- part of the story is the headline ... but only if applied to
- yourselves."
-
- "I have in my counselling sessions been using the Chill Out guide
- and I have been astounded at the success of this publication,
- which in my experience has given the drugs agencies credibility
- with the young drug users."
-
- "I am 27 years of age and have been using Ecstasy for the last
- three years. Like most users I was ignorant of the side-effects
- attached to its use. Having read the leaflet, I have sat back and
- actually thought about my drug use."
-
- "I was reminded of the outrage expressed when MDTIC introduced a
- free needle policy for drug users, and how that policy, now copied
- by others, has helped circumvent the spread of AIDS."
-
- "The objectors to this leaflet ... the Liverpool Echo, Lynda Chalker
- and Ken Hind ... are in no position whatsoever to comment on a
- situation they know very little about. ... It is about time the
- whole drugs issue was tackled with some realism, instead of
- pretending that by making it illegal ,the whole problem will
- disappear."
-
- "I think your articles on Ecstasy are on par with the Government
- warnings ... a load of rubbish. ... You are meant to be an
- independent local paper for the good of the community. Tell us the
- truth and tell it straight."
-
- Like the politicians, the newspapers were attempting to appeal to
- an imaginary consensus ... the worried parent, concerned about their
- children being ╘on drugs'. Furthermore, the newspapers were
- relying upon common sense notions of how we should deal with drug
- problems ... believing that the public will reject anything other
- than a 'just say no' approach. The response of the public to the
- controversy indicates that this consensus no longer exists ... and
- perhaps it never did. In Liverpool at least, it seems that the
- public is well aware of the failure of previous drug policies and
- prevention campaigns. The evidence of this failure is visible all
- around us ... to any parent of teenage children, anybody who drinks
- in the local pub, in fact, anybody between the ages of 13 and 45.
- Illicit drug use is now an integrated part of the social fabric in
- this area.
-
- These letters also indicate a high level of understanding and
- acceptance of the harm reduction policies that were introduced in
- Mersey Region in order to tackle HIV and AIDS. Rather than
- opposing our realistic, pragmatic approach to drug problems, the
- public appear to be calling for the extension of such policies.
- Unfortunately, some politicians and sections of the tabloid press
- have not yet caught up with public opinion.
-
- Conclusion: What we're gonna do right here is go
- back....
-
- This controversy arose primarily because of the serious
- contradictions that underpin earlier ideologies governing how we
- think about illegal drug use. Unless these contradictions are
- resolved, attempts to develop rational and effective responses to
- the problem of ever-increasing illegal drug use are likely to
- continue to fail.
-
- A major problem lies in our inability to think hard about the
- issues of pleasure and consciousness change. One of the principles
- that appears to underpin the political and media ideology is the
- notion that it is inherently wrong to seek to alter ones
- consciousness through artificial means. This assumption seems to
- have its roots in Protestantism and in the modern requirement for
- the time and work disciplines that were necessary to industrial
- capitalism.
-
- Though many of the early prohibition laws were a product of the
- struggle for economic and political dominance by certain sectional
- interests over others (Berridge & Edwards 1987; Duster, 1970;
- Szasz, 1975), more recent laws introduced to regulate synthetic
- psychedelic drugs appear to be a direct consequence of the
- perceived challenge that these drugs posed to the existing
- ideological order. Highly vocal advocates of these drugs like LSD
- and Mescaline argued that they had a revolutionary potential, a
- promise that seemed to come true as large numbers of American
- hippies began to visibly reject the old ideologies of the American
- Dream and the Protestant Work Ethic.
-
- Following the reaction to early advocates of psychedelic drugs
- like Timothy Leary, and the subsequent consequences that this
- anti-psychedelic backlash had for research into the uses and
- properties of these drugs, more recent advocates of drug law
- reform have strenuously avoided any discussion of the pleasurable
- aspects of the 'new' psychedelic drugs. These new psychedelic
- advocates talk about the value of drugs like MDMA as a ╘research
- tool' or as an 'adjunct to psychotherapy'. Alexander Shulgin has
- described MDMA as 'pennicilin fore the soul'. It is important to
- ask ourselves whether a group of middle-aged Californian academics
- sitting around on MDMA listening to Mozart and calling it
- ╘research' can genuinely be prioritised over the behaviour of an
- eighteen year kid from the North West of England who takes MDMA to
- get out of his face and dance to hard-core Techno music? We think
- not.
-
- The central issue here is one that is rarely addressed in public
- debates. The question is whether a state of intoxication should be
- considered an inherently immoral state. If society decides that it
- is, then we must surely apply the same sanctions to the use of
- alcohol and caffeine as we do to heroin. However, an ever-growing
- body of expert opinion is starting to acknowledge the probability
- that decisions about intoxication and recreational drug use are
- matters for individual choice, and that drug problems are best
- dealt with as health issues, rather than a matter for moral
- judgment or sanctions under criminal law. Most young people who
- use drugs today are aware of these contradictions and will no
- longer listen to grown-ups telling them that it is 'wrong' to take
- Ecstasy. They point to the legally sanctioned drugs -- tobacco and
- alcohol -- and ask what is the difference. If the reply is couched
- in terms of health risks, then young people today are only too
- capable of pointing out that deaths related to tobacco and alcohol
- use far outweigh deaths from MDMA use. They will also ask why
- nobody has taken the trouble to make those risks known in an
- accessible manner, along with information on how to minimize those
- risks.
-
- If the argument against using illegal drugs is couched in terms of
- support for a corrupt and illegal enterprise, young people just
- see this as another point in favour of the legalisation of drugs.
- Without wishing to get into the pro's and con's of the
- legalisation debate here, the widespread use of drugs like
- cannabis, LSD and MDMA in the UK must lend more weight to the
- arguments for interventions aimed at separating the different
- illegal drug markets. Our research with this group has indicated
- that because of this overwhelmingly positive initial drug
- experience, MDMA may act as a low threshold initiation into
- illegal drug use, and the lack of honest and accurate information
- about this drug can lead young people to reject messages about all
- illegal drugs, leading many to go on to experiment with drugs like
- heroin and cocaine. Some liberalisation of cannabis and MDMA
- markets would offer more control and easier intervention in those
- markets, while reducing the potential crossover.
-
- It is our belief, based upon our experience in Liverpool, that the
- general public is able to understand such sophisticated concepts
- and is likely to embrace them, given the failure of traditional
- methods of drug control. Unfortunately, interventions of this type
- remain unlikely to be implemented while politicians and the mass
- media continue to approach questions of drug control from an
- ideology rooted in moral absolutism, rather than adopting a
- pragmatic approach based upon interventions that have been tested
- and work rather than outdated ideologies that are inevitably
- doomed to failure..
-
-
- Bibliography
-
- Beck, J. (1990). The Public Health Implications Of MDMA Use, in
- S.J. Peroutka, (ed.) Ecstasy: the clinical, pharmacological and
- neurotoxicological effects of the drug MDMA. Kluwer Academic
- Publications, Boston.
-
- Berridge V. & Edwards, G. (1987) Opium and the people. Yale
- University Press
-
- BBC Television (1992) E is for Ecstasy, Everyman, BBC 1,
- Transmitted 24th May, 1992. London.
-
- Charters, D. (1992) "Agonising Over Ecstasy While The Rave Goes
- On.╙ Daily Post 3rd, February, 1992., Liverpool
-
- Dalton, S. (1991) Personal communication with Andrew Bennett.
-
- Daily Star (1992) "What A Dope╙. 29th January, 1992. London.
-
- Dorn, N. & Murji, K. (1992) Drug Prevention: A review of the
- English language literature. ISDD, London.
-
- Duster, T. ( 1970 ) The Legislation of Morality. Free Press, New
- York.
-
- Gilman, M. (1992) Beyond Opiates. Druglink, ISDD, London.
-
- Grund, J-P. (1992) Talk on outreach work Drug Prevention
- conference (unpublished) London
-
- Henry, J. et al. (1992) Ecstasy and the dance of death. The
- Lancet, London.
-
- James, M. (1991) Ecstasy. The Face, Nov. 1991, London
-
- Kaplan, C.D., Grund, J-P & Dzoljic, M.R. (1989) Ecstasy in Europe:
- reflections on the epidemiology of MDMA. Instituut voor
- Verslavingsonderzoek, Rotterdam.
-
- Lindesmith, A. (1940) Dope Fiend Mythology. Journal of Criminology
- and Police Science, Vol 31.
-
- Liverpool Echo (1992) "Raving Mad╙ 28th January, 1992. Liverpool.
-
- Liverpool Echo (1992a) "Drugs agency to lose funding╙ 30th
- January, 1992. Liverpool.
-
- Liverpool Echo (1992b) Letters. 4th February, 1992. Liverpool.
- Middles, M. (1992) Ecstasy is not Horlicks. Manchester Evening
- News.
-
- McDermott, P. et.al., (1992) Dealing with recreational drug use.
- Druglink, ISDD, London.
-
- McDermott, P. (1992) Representations of Drug Users: Facts, Myths
- and their role in Harm Reduction in O'Hare, P. et. al. (Eds.) The
- Reduction of Drug Related Harm. Routledge. London.
-
- McDermott, P. & Matthews, A. (1992) An ethnographic study of a
- cohort of Ecstasy users in the North West of England. Forthcoming.
-
- Nasmyth, P. (1985). Ecstasy (MDMA). The Face No. 66. London.
-
- O'Rourke, P. J. (1985) Turn on, Tune in, Go to the office late on
- Monday, in Republican Party Reptile. Paladin. London.
-
- Rosenbaum, M. & Morgan, P. (1989) Ethnographic Notes on Ecstasy
- Use Among Professionals. International Journal on Drug Policy
- Vol.1 No. 2. Liverpool.
-
- Shulgin, A. T. & Shulgin, A. (1992) PIHKAL. Transform Press.
- California
-
- Stephens, J. (1987) LSD and the American Dream. Heinemann. London
-
- Szasz, T. (1975) Ceremonial Chemistry. Routlege & Kegan Paul.
- London.
-
- The Face (1991) Letters, Dec. 1991. London.
-
- The Sun, (1992) "Fury At Sex Guide To E.╙ 29th January, 1992.
- London.
-
- Young, J. (1972) The Drugtakers. Paladin. London
-
- Young, J. (1973) The Myth of the Drug Taker in The Mass Media, in
- S. Cohen & J. Young, The Manufacture of News. Constable, London.
-
- Zinberg, N. (1984) Drug, Set & Setting. Yale University Press, New
- Haven & London
-
- 1John Paul Grund argues that outreach should be aimed at those who are most
- at risk. Ravers do not fall into this category. Presentation at Metropole
- Hotel, London. European Drug Prevention Week .
-
- 2In the experience of the first author, many journalists who cover drug
- stories actually use illegal drugs themselves, but when writing an article,
- they rarely draw upon their own experience, preferring to call a drugs
- agency to ask 'do you have any drug users we can interview'. This separation
- between personal experience and the subject of the story may be seen as a
- form of alienation that contributes a great deal to the skewed
- representations of illicit drug use in society. My article on drug use among
- drug workers (McDermott, 1990) looks at a similar phenomenon among people
- working in the drugs field.
-
- 3 Neither paper sells very well on Merseyside, in part because of their
- continued support for the locally despised Conservative government, but
- primarily because of their coverage of the Hillsborough football disaster.
- In 1986, at a Liverpool football match held at Hillsborough stadium in
- Sheffield, 96 fans died and many more were injured as a consequence of poor
- crowd control. The game was being broadcast live on TV at the time, and many
- Liverpool people watched as their friends and relatives had the life crushed
- out of them.
-
- Widespread popular anger at the tabloids built over the next few days.
- First, some papers published ghoulish pictures of dead and dying football
- supporters, in full colour, without any thought for the impact on the
- friends and families of the victims. Then, The Sun and The Star published
- unattributed police claims that the tragedy had been caused by unruly
- Liverpool supporters, who had been aggressive, had robbed bodies lying
- injured or dead, and had urinated on police officers who were attempting to
- help the victims.
-
- In fact, a public enquiry found that the tragedy was a consequence of police
- mismanagement of the crowd and poor facilities at the ground, and the
- allegations were made by a senior police officer, who resigned over the
- incident, who was attempting to divert blame from his force. The people of
- Merseyside began a mass boycott of The Sun and The Star. Newsagents refused
- to stock the papers and the few who did found themselves abused by their
- customers. The circulation of these papers has never recovered in the region
- so both papers are continuously seeking stories that will help them to
- rebuild their circulation in the Merseyside area. The Echo's "Raving Mad╙
- story seemed ideal, appealing to uninformed but concerned parents and so
- both papers carried it as their front page story the following day.
-