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aaronphetamine - i couldn't have said it better myself, big hug.
Thats what i am talking about, spread the love!
JW
Thats what i am talking about, spread the love!
JW
PS I have a problem - that deep down I don't believe in prohibition ( especially in the case of alcohol) - so what's the answer in the case of both booze and drugs? - education maybe?
If people have self control and knowledge of what they are putting into their body's drugs can be a positive thing.... if they don't then it can be a different story.
The same applies to alcohol, food, etc. its about strong grounding & common sense.
aaronphetamine - i couldn't have said it better myself, big hug.
Thats what i am talking about, spread the love!
JW
Anyway, it simply doesn't matter. He is dead now. He left behind a trail of ravaged lives, including those of his two precious daughters.
I have a different opinion to most when it comes to drugs, i take them when i feel like it and i enjoy every minute of it...
I'd say wake up and smell the dasies, time to educate people about HARM MINIMISATION rather than try and say no.
.Originally Posted by Julia
Anyway, it simply doesn't matter. He is dead now. He left behind a trail of ravaged lives, including those of his two precious daughters
tough story there Julia - and I agree with DukeyOriginally Posted by Dukey
Julia - just felt this bit was worth focusing on.
"He is dead now. He left behind a trail of ravaged lives, including those of his two precious daughters."
The trail of destruction is where the true cost to society lies....
Sunday, September 16, 2007
Bronwyn Bishop gets tough on harm minimisers
The Coalition’s ‘tough on drugs’ policy has been, in fact, a de facto harm-minimisation policy with a tough, external public persona. The years of being tough on drug users in Australia are, in fact, long since finished.
With respect to heroin addictions, emphasis for a long time has been on treatment of the addiction by switching addicts to the use of commercially-acceptable opiates such as methadone or buprenorphine that are just as addictive as heroin. It is primarily a pessimistic viewpoint - the assumption is that we cannot eradicate illicit opiate use so let us learn to live with illicit drug use by 'medicalising' the problem.
A safe injecting room, use of needle exchanges and an increasing reluctance to use the force of the law against drug users, have all acted in unison to reduce the user costs of being a ‘dope fiend’ thereby encouraging use. So-called ‘harm-minimisation’ policies reduce the user costs of drug use creating more users.
With respect to heroin, usage fell in Australia after years of growing strongly (due partly to the support of our local harm-minimisation industry) because of the successful attack on heroin supplies by the Australian police in 2000/2001. This led to Australia’s so-called ‘heroin drought’. This has greatly reduced the number of new drug users and vastly reduced the number of heroin overdose deaths. I am completing a study of the 2001 drought, with Lee Smith, which I will release later this year, but the main conclusions are clear. Heroin demands and initiation rates are relatively price elastic (this is known from a myriad of studies including many not relating at all to the drought) so a reduction in supply will reduce demand. This, in simple terms, is what happened in Australia in 2001.
The industry of drug treatment officers and doctors with the thousands of their clients who they keep addicted to commercial-acceptable opiates have not contributed to reducing usage. They have transferred large numbers of users from illicit to licit opiates but have not primarily targeted the ending of drug addictions.
Partly I suspect the medicos hate the idea that supply restrictions and consequent price increases can reduce heroin demanded simply because they are ignorant of economics and fairly ignorant of anything outside their specific disciplines of study.
Doctors do very specific vocational degrees and don’t study social science disciplines. They don't have breadth in their approach to issues - you either support their line or you are a heartless fool who understands nothing. Their objective, as they see it, is simply to reduce harm to the patient in front of them and that is it. The notion that this might encourage costly continued usage by that patient or 'spill-over' effects on broader society does not cross their minds. The subversive notion that, by coming to the aid of junkies and making their life easier on every account, one might increase demand for the use of drugs is simply preposterous to them. It is preposterous because they are so ignorant of basic social science research.
At drug conferences, like the annual APSAD meetings, those addicted to drugs are keynote speakers and treated with hushed tones of reverence. I take a different view of these social parasites.
Partly too, any suggestion along the lines of an expanded role for the law cuts into the extent to which the addiction issue can be 'medicalised' and thereby limits the ability of 'harm-minimisation' oriented institutions to get more money and to ‘empire build’ on the basis of the expanded demands that their so-called harm-minimisation policies bring about.
The research groups like NDARC that draw in millions in research grants each year do really low standard work. If I marked most of it as an honours thesis it would get a fail grade. The researchers clearly don’t understand basic statistics or economics – most of their so-called analyses are based on bi-variate graphs where some sort of confused causality is asserted between two variables. Their Commonwealth Government-funded forecasts of current drug use trends are an absolute joke and an embarrassment to even others in their own professional groupings.
Senator Bronwyn Bishop’s Senate Committee report, The Impact of Illicit Drug Use on Families, is designed to challenge the harm-minimisation paradigm that we have de facto come to rely on by seeking to re-promote the virtues of drug use abstinence. The report involves a recommitment to a 'zero tolerance' approach to illicit drugs.
The Bishop Report has already aroused ire among the medical community and the spiteful army of ‘harm-minimisers’. This is hardly surprising as it is the most radical critique of the harm-minimisation policy for years. Of course, whether it will ever be translated into policy is doubtful given the Government’s current problems. A group of Labor Party pollies on the Committee did put forward a minority report but they did agree with most of the core committee recommendations which is hopeful.
By throwing the ‘cat among the pigeons’ the report should provoke a community rethink. It is primarily an optimistic report that suggests we can reduce illicit drug usage to low levels. While it has been strongly criticised it has also gained support from groups such as Drug Free Australia.
Some of the main ideas in the Bishop Report: · Constrain treatment options to be those that seek drug use abstinence rather than living with an addiction.
· Maintain a continued emphasis on policing for addressing drug issues.
· Minimise harm with respect to the children of addicts by removing children them from parents who are drug addicted into adoption. Expend increased resources for detecting illicit drug use by parents and promote contraception among addicts and manage the social security income of users to promote the provision of basic needs for kids.
· Fund only agencies promoting drug use abstinence. The primary objective of pharmacotherapy should be the cessation of an individual’s opioid use so Naltrexone implants – designed to end heroin addiction – are proposed to be listed on the PBS.
· Reassess the role of needle and syringe exchange programs to determine whether they are supported by the local communities and examine whether they direct users to treatment enabling them to be drug free.
· Have random testing for drivers affected by illicit drugs concurrently with random breath testing for alcohol and random workplace drug testing regime to improve safety for patients and other staff.
· Place child users aged up to 18 years in mandatory treatment for illicit drug addiction with an organisation seeking to make them drug free.
It is a ‘tough love’ approach to the issue of illicit drug use. But, in combination with policies that make heroin and other drugs expensive, these sorts of policies will help to minimise the extent of addiction and the harm that addicts inflict on communities.
http://www.bluelight.ru/vb/archive/index.php/t-298712.html
So moving on from the 'Who uses drugs on a daily basis?' thread i propose that us more orderly drug takers (yeah right..) make up our perfect rota for drug taking! This would involve picking drugs according to the way they affect the body to avoid tolerance and dependance issues. An example would be not using drugs which work on the GABA system every day, say not using valium and GHB two days in a row or not using serotonergic drugs within a few days of each other, like 2c-b and LSD. This is probably grossly simplified but its a good yard stick IMO.
So for me...
monday - 2c-b/LSD/4-aco-DMT whatever (although i don't use psychs once a week)
tuesday - GBL/GHB
wednesday - ketamine (midweek k-hole treat, yummy)
thursday - kratom/poppy tea
friday - **** sake its friday take whatever
saturday - see above
sunday - valium and a spliff (ohhh, picking two thats a bit naughty, lol)
Of course you could adjust this to a two week or monthly system if you prefer and are sensible, if you wanted to be really anal you could set yourself a drug rota where you tick off the drugs you've done in a week to not do the same one twice.
I suppose a lot of the time what drugs you take are influenced by who you are with but **** that be self absorbed!!
At the bars in the city u bump into some ojne and they nearly wanna deck ya, but in the family, u bump into some one and they smile give ya a hug and a handshake haha.
Oh brother!lol thats because you just need to look at what kind of people drink on a regular occasion and what people take drugs. Most drug takers are little panzies that like frothing in their mouth while bouncing for 24 hours then grinding their teeth to bits when they wake up. Get a footy team thow coked up you will see how they act![]()
This is a huge subject and one on which I have conflicting feelings as a result of someone I loved being lost to the mire of narcotic addiction....
Oh brother!![]()
Anyone know what this bloke is talking about , GABA etc?then again, there's the concept of the "drug rota" - allegedly to avoid dependence ... like this post I found on another forum ...
http://www.bluelight.ru/vb/archive/index.php/t-298712.html
Weekly(monthly?) drug rota for harm minimisation and for putting an end to tolerance!
An example would be not using drugs which work on the GABA system every day, say not using valium and GHB two days in a row or not using serotonergic drugs within a few days of each other, like 2c-b and LSD. This is probably grossly simplified but its a good yard stick IMO.
gar, thanks - so after a while they don't enjoy particularly good reception, I take itDont take the view that most drug users are that stupid
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