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Nice People Take Drugs

phr

Ex-Bluelighter
Joined
May 25, 2004
Messages
36,682
The drugs do work – for a lot of people
Claudia Robin
The Guardian (Blog section)
6.4.09



Nice-People-Take-Drugs-ca-002.jpg


Nice People Take Drugs – it's not a controversial statement. We all know people who have. The last three US presidents have admitted to it. Much has been suggested about the likely next UK prime minister. Nowadays if a politician admitted to it, the tabloids would struggle to make a story stick let alone generate a scandal. The fact is, a lot of people from all walks of life have at some point taken drugs and it's time we got real about it.

That's why this week we have launched a new campaign called Nice People Take Drugs. Buses will be travelling across London carrying this slogan in an attempt to get people talking about drugs and kickstart a drug policy debate.

Over one third of the adult population of England and Wales has used illegal drugs and almost 10 million people have smoked cannabis. According to the European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction, one in eight Britons under 35 has taken cocaine. Some will have experimented with drugs with little apparent consequence, some will continue to use them on occasions.

The situation where people have to deny, hide or, if found out, regret their drug taking is simply absurd. The public is tired of the artificial representation of drugs in society, which is not truthful about the fact that all sorts of people use drugs. If we are to have a fair and effective drug policy, it must be premised on this reality.

It is time for the public to challenge the mantra adhered to by politicians and much of the media that society must continue to fight a war on drugs, as if they are an enemy worth fighting and ones that can be defeated. The implication that drugs are evil and that users of them ought to be made to feel ashamed suits this status quo, but in fact does not reflect most people's experience of drugs.

We all know that, for a minority, drugs and alcohol can have disastrous consequences – but ones that are only exacerbated by the current laws and are better addressed with robust and comprehensive public health campaigns.

Aside from the occasional tinkering with the outdated classification system, drugs and drug policy do not get properly discussed and politicians are afraid to debate the possibility of meaningful reform.

The government is reluctant to tackle the subject firstly because of the culture of fear of drugs that is used as justification for the zero-tolerance approach, and also due to politicians' uncertainty about how to make the transition from failed to improved drug policies.

The Nice People Take Drugs campaign is needed so that the public can give politicians the confidence that they need to abandon the ridiculous 'tough on drugs' stance and instead focus on finding real and effective ways to properly control drugs and manage drug use. This would make drugs much less dangerous and, critically, less available to children.

The current system has brought us powerful drugs like crack cocaine, skunk and methamphetamine; it has ravaged countries from Afghanistan to Colombia and has cost billions in a war on people who use drugs. Governments have next to no control over drugs and they are arguably more available and cheaper than ever before. In the UK it is often far easier for a 14-year-old to get cannabis than alcohol.

Breaking the taboo on drugs is the first step to reducing the harm that they can cause. By far the greatest risk to the majority of people who use drugs is criminalisation and stigmatisation. To simply ban substances and arrest those who use them is no more than a complete abdication of policy makers' responsibility to protect the health and well being of its people.

We must start a debate about the kind of drug policy that this country wants to see. The UK does not want drug laws that benefit massive drug cartels and are politically convenient for politicians, but ones that deal effectively and maturely with drugs and make our society a safer place for our children.

Link!
 
Great article, good to see some common sense out there :) And it's a good idea, I think there are a lot of politicians who would hold much more reasonable stances on drug policy if they didn't fear public backlash, we need to undo years of imposed silence and ignorance and propaganda and start discussing the facts, and ideas like this are a good way to start that dialogue.
 
Sweet article! Awesome idea to have this slogan on buses, I think that they should have a web address on the banner to a web site that goes more in depth to the reasons behind the campaign though. Maybe they do but I can't see it on the photo.
 
This is incredible. The organization that is running this ad campaign has my support! :)

I hope something like this makes it's way across the pond.
 
I try to be a nice person. Can I have some cannabis now, please?
 
NEWS : 12.6.09 - Do nice people take drugs?

Do nice people take drugs?

nice-people-take-drugs_bus-ad2.jpg


Evan Maloney
Friday, June 12, 2009 at 05:39am


That’s what a UK human rights charity is trying to say at the moment but their right to free speech has been thwarted by the British government, who took down advertisements that were part of a campaign to make British lawmakers and the British public reconsider their attitudes toward illegal drug takers.

I do think the traditional model for illegal drug takers is out-of-date and God knows a lot of people with respectable careers indulge in a few glass A’s or a bit of weekend weed without ever losing the thread of their humanity. A lot of nice people from stable, loving families and with good educations take illegal drugs. But at the same time it’s hard to ignore the fact that a lot of idiots take illegal drugs too.

What do you think about the ad campaign? Is it standing up for a much-maligned social group or is it a dangerous provocation that could lead young, impressionable minds astray?

There is a lot of drug taking in my soon-to-be published novel Tofu Landing. Before it was finally accepted for publication the message I was getting from editors was that a lot of the characters were not very nice. I thought it was somewhat ironic because that, as the shepherd said quietly to the stars one night, is the whole point. For some reason, because the narration is not standing in judgement and saying “drugs = bad”, editors assumed it must be saying that “drugs = cool”. In fact the issue is far more complex and, to be honest, once the book is published I bet a lot of people who take drugs will say that I am portraying drug takers in a negative light.

Sometimes you just can’t win.

You would think that these days the whole question of illegal drugs might have developed beyond some kind of polemical argument where they are either totally cool or totally loserish. The reality is that a lot of people take illegal drugs these days, thus a novel which looks, in an ostensibly objective manner, at people who take a lot of illegal drugs should not be simply regarded as a pro-drug narrative. Rather the narrative is trying to look a little deeper into the context of a pretty common circumstance, why is it that some people enjoy snorting cocaine while others are terrified or disgusted by the drug? Ironically, it could be that there are some people who are disgusted by the drug and take it anyway.

http://blogs.news.com.au/news/splat/index.php/news/comments/d_nice_people_take_drugs/56100
 
Nice people take drugs....

i love that poster...
 
that's hot. LOL

not many nice people but then that's just the human race for you, drugs or no drugs included... mind you i am talking in the context of habitual users rather than occasional ones. i am just extremely lucky to know some of the non-cunts out there who also happen to take drugs without scamming/ripping/flushing their own lives down the toilet. it's a delicate balancing act.
 
I do like the concept of that poster. Not just because of the message it sends, but also that there is a group who are willing to advertise the opposing opinion of such an out-of-date Government.

Nice people take drugs. Not so nice people also take drugs. It's like anything really.
If you looked at purely addicts whom have abused Meth and what not, of course your perceptions on drug users are going to be biased.

And kingpin007, I often wonder to myself where you find such interesting things. Kudos.
 
good point indeed. just ask yourself what the stereotype of a drug user is??
 
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