The
Wrong Message Of Legalizing Illicit Drugs
By
the Partnership for a Drug-Free America
18-Aug-94
A
new publication that discusses that any policy discussion that includes
consideration of legalizing illicit drugs reflects either a complete
misunderstanding or ignorance of the key factors that affect trial and
use of these substances. Legalization sends the societal message of
public approval, eroding the anti-drug attitudes of our youth and encouraging
them to try and use illegal drugs. What we need is the reverse -- establishing
the unequivocal message that our public behavior standard and social
norm is 'no-use," continuously reinforced through
the attitudes of harm/risk and social disapproval that are prevent inhibitors
to our youth trying and using these substances.
First,
it is critical to recognize that drug abuse is, at its core, the result
of the demand we as individuals and society create for these drugs.
Prior to drug use becoming the disease of addiction, all drug trial
and use is the result of decisions/choices we make to use or not use.
The primary determinant in these decisions are the attitudes
of 1) perceived harm/risk and 2) social disapproval. This is true across
ethnicity, demography and geography. All progress in reducing drug use
and, ultimately, addiction, is the result of increasing anti- drug attitudes
in order to change the behavior.
The
message of legalization is precisely antithetical to everything we've
learned about preventing the demand for illegal drugs. The epidemic
of illegal drug use over the past three decades was the result of these
substances, their use, and their users becoming "normalized"
-perceived as benign and an accepted part of normal social behavior.
Normalization has led to nearly 80 million Americans having tried illegal
drugs. Because we did not understand the impairment and harm that results
from using illegal drugs, we passively and actively moved away from
the behavior standard and social norm of no-use.
The
reverse process of "denormalization" that began with the death
of Len Bias in 1986 has resulted in a decline of more than 50% in the
number of Americans using illicit drugs. This fact is not well known,
and probably is responsible for much of the sense of hopelessness and
helplessness that often surrounds the issue of drug abuse. As a nation,
we began to recognize the harmfulness of drug use, and we began to re-establish
the social norm of no- use. All the declines in trial and non-addicted
use of illicit drugs are directly correlated with
the increase in the attitudes of perceived harm/risk and social disapproval.
Importantly,
however, most recent trends among young teens indicate an erosion in
their key anti-drug attitudes of risk and disapproval, resulting in
higher usage rates of marijuana, LSD, cocaine and inhalants. Further
confusion in the behavior standard and social norm of no-use, especially
consideration of legalizing (read 'normalizing") illicit drugs,
will surely accelerate this disturbing trend and put us back into the
drug epidemic of the 1970's and early 1980's.
Courtesy:
Partnership for a Drug-Free America
Distributed
by:
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