Also I'd like to add that the DARE program is its own gateway into drug use.
Whoever thought it'd be a good idea to let a police officer teach kids about drugs?
This is what was presented to my classmates and I.
Drugs make you feel: [list of negative side effects]
To get your drugs you may resort to: [criminal activity]
Eventually you go to jail or die from using: [drug]
Drugs are common and are something you will probably encounter in your lives.
Although as kids we take in most information without questioning or skepticism, something struck me as wrong in this picture painted by this policeman. Most specifically the question of "Why do people use drugs if all the above hold true, if they present no benefit to the user?"
Something went off in my head. Why would people knowingly put themselves in jeopardy by using drugs; it had to offer something beneficial. Something wasn't right about what this cop was telling me. I had to find out for myself.
Years later I used my DARE certificate as a chopping surface. I am currently doing a research paper on discrimination by employers against convicts. I really want to tell the world that the DARE program is the real gateway "drug."
I even recall being told that using marijuana will lead to heroin. I scratched my head. Why, is marijuana better than heroin, less bad? Yeah, I used marijuana before I used heroin. The idea of marijuana as a gateway drug might be self-fulfilling. If I didn't know that heroin is related to marijuana, I probably wouldn't even be exposed to it unless I sought it out. It took til my late teens and early 20's to even realize that legal alcohol is in the same ballpark with illegal and dangerous marijuana.