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- From: govegan@uclink.berkeley.edu (Scott Andrew Selby)
- Newsgroups: talk.politics.drugs,alt.drugs
- Subject: Why Drug Free Revised
- Date: 1 May 1994 23:15:06 GMT
- Message-ID: <2q1d5q$8v0@agate.berkeley.edu>
-
- Thanks for people's feedback. Much of this second edition has been changed.
- If you like this, please let me know. If you have any disagreements, please
- send me specific, constructive criticism. E-mail me directly
- (idealforliving@uclink.Berkeley.EDU) as I am not subscribed to any
- newsgroups or mailing lists.
-
- Before passing judgement on this, first read all of it as it is coming at
- the issue from a completely new perspective. This an attempt to disseminate
- information about the political effects of drug use from a liberal
- perspective - it is NOT about the issue of drug legalization and does not
- advocate prohibition, nor is it a personal attack on drug users. Instead, it
- discusses the impact of alcohol, tobacco, and other drugs on people's
- health, world and U.S. politics, and the environment.
-
- If you like this file, send a SASE to the address at the end of the file for
- a hard copy and pass this e-mail file on to anyone who would be interested.
-
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- ******** Personal and Political Responsibility in Daily Life ************
-
- Recreational drug use is one of the most widespread and
- destructive problems facing us today. Much like other matters of
- lifestyle, drug use is not contained entirely within either the private
- or the public realm, but lies somewhere in between. The ramifications
- of the purchase and consumption of a beer and a cigarette include, for
- instance, not only obvious harm to the consumer╒s body, but also tacit
- financial support of the political causes to which the given
- alcohol/tobacco corporation contributes, often right-wing in nature.
- The successful election campaigns of North Carolina Senator Jesse
- Helms in 1984 and 1990, for example, were both funded in large part
- by profits from the alcohol and tobacco industries, of which the right-
- wing congressman has been an ardent supporter.1 There is an element
- of irony in this; the drugs that are used in the name of youthful
- rebellion end up benefiting the extreme-right╤ against which the
- rebellion claims to be pitted in the first place. From the point of view
- of activism, drugs only contribute to maintaining the status quo.
- Those who are opposed to the current system often believe that there
- is something rebellious about consuming illegal drugs. The reality is
- that by purchasing and using drugs, they support the establishment
- which they dislike so much. Their consumption also minimizes the
- volume of their dissent by neutralizing their activist-tendencies.
- From a health/social perspective things look even worse.
- While political setbacks can in the end be overcome, nothing can be
- done to bring back the four-hundred thousand people who die in the
- United States as a result of cigarette consumption alone every year,
- during which hundreds of thousands more fall victim to other
- alcohol- and other drug-related deaths.
-
- HEALTH
- Perhaps the most obvious argument against recreational
- drugs is the toll their use takes on the human body. Cigarettes have
- been shown to cause lung cancer; cancer of the pharynx, larynx,
- esophagus, bladder, and pancreas; chronic bronchitis; peptic ulcers;
- emphysema; and various birth defects (if consumed by a pregnant
- woman).2 Moderate alcohol consumption increases one's risk of
- certain cancers threefold,3 and use by a pregnant woman can cause
- birth defects.4 A single marijuana cigarette, often thought to be
- harmless, causes as much lung damage as five tobacco cigarettes.5
- Marijuana also often leads to a long term lack of motivation and
- apathy among regular users.6 And underlying almost every drug╒s
- list of individual problems is physical dependency (including
- marijuana, commonly thought to be only psychologically addictive).7
- New drugs continue to be created whose health effects are not fully
- known.
-
- SOCIAL RAMIFICATIONS
- An individual╒s drug habit has a profound effect upon the
- community of people with which he/she interacts on a daily basis.
- For instance, second hand smoke alone is responsible for the deaths
- of fifty-thousand Americans each year.8 Drunk drivers kill an
- additional seventy-thousand people at the same rate.
- It is clear that while under the influence of any mind-
- altering drug, one has decreased control of one╒s actions. This affects
- both the individual and those around him/her. It is often the main
- factor in occurrences of assault, sexual abuse, domestic violence, and
- physical abuse in general. Date rape is often caused by aggressive
- sexual behavior brought on by drug consumption. A complete list of
- social problems exacerbated by drug use is too long to include in a
- pamphlet of this length. Even if one has never been a perpetrator in a
- drug-related incident, one is still responsible for such occurrences (to
- some degree), through drug consumption or support thereof.
-
- POLITICAL ISSUES
- Unfortunately, while use of illegal drugs is combated,
- consumption of alcohol and tobacco is promoted. Corporations
- consistently deny that the products they sell are dangerous. Cigarette
- manufacturers, for example, claim that cigarettes are neither a threat
- to the consumer╒s health nor addictive,9 despite scientific proof to the
- contrary. After a Philip Morris research team concluded that
- nicotine is addictive in a 1983 report, the company forced a science
- journal to withdraw the resulting article.10 The fact is that cigarettes
- are at least as addictive as cocaine and heroin11 and their threat to
- public health is undeniable: studies have shown cigarettes to contain
- a horrifying array of substances, including acetone, carbon
- monoxide, methanol, ammonia, hydrogen sulfide, insecticides, and
- benzene.12 In terms of public safety, the major tobacco corporations
- have for years had the technology to safeguard against fires caused
- by their products by making cigarettes that go out after a period of
- non-use, but still they put additives in cigarettes that increase the rate
- at which the product burns.13
- The federal government is not doing much to stop the public
- health threat caused by alcohol/cigarette consumption because
- corporations have the United States Congress in shackles, which take
- the form of gifts, contributions, and campaign funds.14 In the
- American South, where tobacco is an important industry,
- congressmen are forced to support the tobacco corporations or face
- expulsion from office. For this reason, government subsidies exist for
- tobacco growers that insure them a profit on their crops.15 The
- corporations placate the would-be opposition in government with
- money, which allows them to manufacture their products
- unquestioned. Indeed it is only a minority of government officials
- who have been fighting the tobacco industry.
- The products and their health-hazards, however, are only
- part of the picture. Almost all of the corporations that manufacture
- alcohol and cigarettes turn over a significant portion of their profits
- to special-interest groups that oppose civil-rights legislation and
- social programs. The Coors corporation, for example, has opposed
- the U.S. Civil Rights Act, affirmative action, the Equal Rights
- Amendment, U.S. labor unions, and has been guilty of severe
- environmental damage in Colorado. Perhaps most conspicuously they
- are the founders and primary financial backers of the Colorado-
- based Heritage Foundation: an anti-Semitic, racist, anti-civil rights,
- right-wing think tank.16 Coors is not alone in its reactionary
- pursuits. Henry Weinhard╒s brewery, for example, has used profits
- from beer sales to fund Operation Rescue.
- It is the people who live in the worst conditions, (and thus
- have the greatest need to fight for social change), who most often
- become drug addicts, attempting to escape the troubled conditions of
- this world instead of working to change them. This serves the
- interests of those who run the country: they face no threat of
- rebellion as long as the disenfranchised are busily involved with
- drugs, e.g. the rampant alcohol abuse in Native American
- communities. In 1989, under President Bush, the government set up a
- highly-selective ╥War on Drugs╙, which gave law enforcement
- officials free reign to abuse their authority among society╒s urban
- underclass, while condoning the promotion of alcohol and other legal
- drugs in the same sector of society.
- Drug production is a waste of environmental resources.
- Food-stuffs, which in sharp contrast are important to produce, could
- be grown on the land used to grow and manufacture drugs. Coca
- plants (used in cocaine production) litter vast tracts of land in
- Central and South America, as do poppies (used for heroin
- production) in various Asian countries. California marijuana
- growers kill large numbers of deer, in some areas more than hunters,
- in an effort to protect their expensive crops.17 Tobacco production
- involves heavy use of wood, burned in order to ╥flue cure╙ the
- product. In Eastern Kenya, Pakistan, and heavily-forested Brazil, the
- effects of logging for the purposes of this aspect of cigarette
- production have already been felt. In fact, it is estimated that one tree
- is felled per 300 cigarettes made.18 In addition, significant pollutants
- are created with the production of cocaine, alcoholic beverages, and
- heroin. The packaging involved for drugs is also wasteful, especially
- that of cigarettes, which involves plastic products such as filters, 533
- billion of which are disposed of in the U.S. each year.19
- Problems in the non-industrialized world brought on by
- legal drug corporations as well as illegal drug producers are another
- disturbing consequence of the drug business. Tobacco and alcohol are
- sold to poor people in developing nations often without any
- warnings about negative health-effects, especially severe considering
- that the cigarettes sold there generally contain twice as much tar (the
- main carcinogen in cigarettes) as do those sold in developed
- nations.20 With cigarette sales waning in the United States, the major
- cigarette corporations have nearly doubled international sales.
- Philip Morris, the largest player in the U.S. tobacco industry, has
- increased its revenues abroad from $8.4 billion in 1989 to $15.7
- billion in 1993.21 Instead of improving their dire conditions, people
- in third world nations are encouraged to spend what little money
- they have on products that will make them more like members of the
- industrialized world. Cigarettes, for example, are promoted on
- television and billboards as a symbol of progress.22 The reality is
- that drug use only worsens living conditions in the non-
- industrialized world, where the drain on financial resources caused
- by a drug habit is magnified. Unfortunately, many of the targeted
- consumers do not have the opportunity to make an informed decision
- about the products that may eventually kill them.
- Legal and illegal drug production in the developing world
- affects not only consumers, but workers as well. They are abused by
- employers, earning scant wages picking cash crops that they cannot
- use for food. The employers, especially those who manufacture and
- traffic illegal drugs, often resort to violent means of protecting their
- industry. In some countries, most notably Columbia, the result is
- chaos. With the money obtained from selling illegal drugs, those
- involved in the trade have created a climate of corruption and
- violence throughout the non-industrialized world, as they have in
- many depressed areas of the developed world.
-
- ALTERNATIVES
- In the face of a corrupt industry, both in America and
- abroad, people must challenge the idea that illegal drugs should be
- treated separately from alcohol and tobacco, a distinction based
- upon the assumption that only illegal drugs are truly ╥drugs╙. This
- way of thinking demonizes illicit drugs and at the same time makes
- licit drugs appear innocuous╤ hiding the fact that there is no real
- difference between the two categories. A prominent proponent of the
- legal/illegal mindset is ╥Partnership for a Drug-Free America╙,
- which, in fact, is financed by the alcohol and tobacco industries. The
- ideas promoted by this group through print and television ads bolster
- the sales of the legal drug industry╒s products by helping them
- maintain a good public image. They operate on the assumption that
- the public is gullible enough to believe that ╥drugs can╒t be too bad if
- they are legal.╙ Much too often, their strategy has worked.
- A change in personal lifestyle can be a slow process, but
- luckily there are many effective methods of ending one╒s drug habit. If
- you are addicted to drugs and want to quit, you can. Seek help or
- counseling if you need it. By being drug free, one boycotts both the
- various industries (legal and illegal) that produce drugs as well as
- the concept of drug-taking. Awareness and a change in personal
- lifestyle are both essential to effecting political change.
-
- ENDNOTES
- 1 (White) pp. 56-69.
- 2 The American Medical Association Encyclopedia of Medicine, Dr. Charles
- B. Clayman, Random House, 1989, pp. 991-992.
- 3 You Are What You Drink, Allan Luks & Joseph Barbato, 1989, p.69
- 4 Health and Wellness, Edlin Golanty, Jones and Bartlett Publishers, Fourth
- Edition, 1992, p. 292.
- 5 Personal Health Choices, Sandra Smith, Jones & Bartlett Pub., 1990, p. 399.
- 6 Clayman p. 665.
- 7 ibid, p. 665.
- 8 California Department of Public Health, 1994.
- 9 ╥Blowing Smoke at Congress╙, New York Times, April 24 , 1994, Editorial.
- 10 ╥The Butt Stops Here╙, Time, April 18, 1994 , p. 59.
- 11 ╥Should Cigarettes be Banned?╙, U.S. News & World Report,4/18/94, p. 36.
- 12 Golanty p. 304.
- 13 (Whelan) pp. 151 and 164.
- 14 (White) pp. 45-71.
- 15 (Whelan) p. 147.
- 16 (Bellant).
- 17 ╥Pot Growers Killing California╒s Wildlife╙, International Wildlife, July/
- August 1985, p. 32.
- 18 (Whelan) p. 172.
- 19 Golanty p. 304.
- 20 (Whelan) p. 170.
- 21 ╥Smoke, Flame and Fire╙, U.S. News & World Report, April 18, 1994, p. 47.
- 22 (Whelan) p. 169.
-
- SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY/BOOKS TO READ
- Booze Merchants: The Inebriating of America. M Jacobson, R. Atkins, G.
- Hacker. CSPI Books, Washington D.C. 1983.
- Coors Connection R.Bellant. Political Research Associates, Cambridge, MA
- 1990. (Bellant)
- Merchants of Death: The American Tobacco Industry L.C. White. Beech
- Tree Books, New York, NY 1988. (White)
- Smoking Gun: How the Tobacco Industry Gets Away With Murder E.M.
- Whelan. George F. Stickley Co, Philadelphia, PA 1984. (Whelan)
- Ask a local librarian for help borrowing these books or books on
- quitting specific substances. Please photocopy and distribute this pamphlet.
- For more information or if you want to help, send a self-addressed stamped
- envelope to:
- Ideal For Living
- PO Box 4353
- Berkeley, CA 94704-0353
-
- e-mail: idealforliving@uclink.Berkeley.EDU
-
-
-