Mom Buys Daughter Cocaine For 18th Birthday

What's So Bad About Casual Drug Use?

According to the latest National Survey on Drug Use and Health, 14.5% of Americans ages 12 and older have tried cocaine at least once, but just 1.8% report using the drug recreationally in the past year. And just 0.6% have used it in the past 30 days, which would seem to be the minimal definition of a casual user.

The same pattern is true for heroin, which is typically talked about as magically addictive. Fear of the drug is surely one of the reasons why just 1.8% of Americans have ever tried it at all. But only 0.3% report using it in the past year and just 0.1% in the past month. That pattern simply shouldn’t be possible if these drugs were as addictive as commonly thought.

In the early 1970s, researcher Lee N. Robins led a study commissioned by the Department of Defense that followed tens of thousands of Vietnam War veterans as they returned to the U.S. Use of narcotics and heroin was rampant among soldiers stationed in Southeast Asia, with as many 20% showing signs of addiction. Yet during the first year back, “only 5% of those who had been addicted in Vietnam were addicted in the U.S.” and “at three years, only 12% of those addicted in Vietnam had been addicted at any time in the three years since return, and for those readdicted, the addiction had usually been very brief.” It wasn’t for lack of access to junk, either: half of the returning addicts said they’d tried heroin at least once since arriving back home.

As my Reason colleague Jacob Sullum has documented, such take-it-or-leave-it findings are common in drug research. In his 2004 book Saying Yes and other places, he’s detailed work in which researchers find a surprising range among heroin users, including a study that concluded, “It seems possible for young people from a number of different backgrounds, family patterns and educational abilities to use heroin occasionally without becoming addicted.”

It’s also true that regular drug users can often function quite well. Sigmund Freud used cocaine habitually for years, and his first major scientific publication was about the wonders of the drug (he eventually forsook it). Another pioneering late 19th and early 20th century man of medicine, William Halsted, was dependent on cocaine and morphine during an illustrious career that revolutionized and modernized surgical techniques.

None of this is a brief for snorting cocaine, shooting heroin or smoking marijuana (a substance that 58% of Americans think should be legal for recreational use) any more than it is a plea for drinking single-malt whiskey or pinot noir.

But in an age in which we are expected to use legal drugs (like beer) and prescription medications (Adderall) responsibly, it’s time to extend that same notion to currently illegal substances whose effects and properties are widely misunderstood. Indeed, the effects of coke, heroin and the rest are a mystery partly because their outlaw status makes it difficult both to research them and have honest discussions about them.

(MORE: Give Rob Ford Rehab, Not Ridicule)
 
No one has their safety guaranteed.
No one ever has
No one ever will

accept it or lock yourself in your house and never leave

but then again most accidents happen in the home so what will you do?
Turn back the clock. If a person feels a user presents a danger. That person may use any means they wish to alleviate the danger.

so if I'm drinking or snorting coke in my own home am I a danger to you or anyone else? And even if you think I am what means do you think you can use to stop me that don't allow me to use any means to stop you from stopping me?
You should do whatever you want in your own home once all children and animals are removed for their safety.

You should not be provided any assistance. No medical care. Overdose, bleed out, on your own.

Leave your home and you are prey.

yeah as if you could tell if anyone walking around was on anything

I love how you people like to talk tough on the internet it really is a never-ending amusement.

and I'm just wondering how will you or the government know what I'm doing in my own home and who is there with me?
Example of your abject stupidity! You have already been told numerous times that we don't give a shit what ewe dew in ewe home! Just keep your ass off our highways!

Show me where I ever said operating any vehicle under the influence was acceptable.
 

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