Meth is top drug problem for most counties

Kix

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Meth is top drug problem for most counties
Survey shows it’s heading east after taking root along West Coast
MSNBC
July 5, 2005

The No. 1 drug problem for many counties across the country is not cocaine, heroin or marijuana but methamphetamine, according to a survey released Tuesday.

A synthetic drug that's easily manufactured, meth has spread from the West Coast and is moving east, according to the survey by the National Association of Counties.

Of 500 law enforcement agencies surveyed in 45 states, 58 percent cited meth as their biggest drug problem, dwarfing cocaine (19 percent), marijuana (17 percent) and heroin (3 percent).

The highest meth percentages were along the West Coast and Upper Midwest. In the Northeast, on the other hand, only 4 percent of counties rated meth as their biggest drug problem. Forty-six percent cited heroin as the top problem, followed by cocaine at 21 percent.

A form of speed that is usually smoked, snorted or injected, meth quickly becomes addictive.

Robberies, domestic violence links
Other findings indicate how quickly the drug is spreading:

* 87 percent of agencies report increases in meth-related arrests starting three years ago. Arizona, Arkansas, California, Florida, Indiana, Louisiana, Minnesota, Nevada, New Mexico, Ohio, Oregon, South Carolina, Tennessee, Utah, Washington and Wyoming reported 100 percent increases.
* 70 percent say robberies or burglaries have increased because of meth use.
* 62 percent report increases in domestic violence because of meth use.

In a report with the survey results, the association described the spread as an "epidemic ... affecting urban, suburban and rural communities nationwide."

The federal government still considers marijuana the top drug problem in the nation, citing a 2003 survey estimating 15 million people who had smoked marijuana over the last month, compared with 600,000 meth users over the previous month.

The counties association, however, said that "county law enforcement officials have a different perspective on this ranking. With the growth of this drug from the rural areas of the western and northwestern regions of this country and its slow but continuing spread to the east, local law enforcement officials see it as their number one drug problem."

Small and large labs
Meth is imported from Mexico, Canada and Asia, the association said, as well as produced in small or large labs across the United States using household ingredients like cold medicines and fertilizer.

"The small lab methamphetamine production and market was originally dominated by motorcycle gangs and local producers chiefly in California and the Pacific Northwest," the association said, "but has grown now to include major producers in Mexico who are responsible for the organized trafficking of meth and by the thousands of small producers in nearly all areas of the country."

"Meth can be manufactured in barns, garages, back rooms of businesses, apartments, hotel and motel rooms, storage facilities, vacant buildings and vehicles," the association said — and even a suitcase.

The full report is online at www.naco.org.

Link

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lol, meth production from a suitcase!
thats a new one.
 
Doesn't suprise me in the slightest. It's rather simple to synth, cheap to produce, and has a HUGE market which at this point is only growing.
 
well i guess they aren't basing their data on amount of money spent, or amount of drugs consumed, but rather the rate at which use of meth is increasing - which is really quick

i mean remember like 2 years ago when everyone was like oh e is the biggest drug problem facing the nation right now (even though there were so few deaths) but the rate was like doubling every year. and the media images looked so kewl.

oh and meth lab in a suitcase - ever seeen the end of the movie Spun jakas?
 
...but ONDCP insists pot is still Problem #1

Drug Czar: We Don't Care About Problems, Just Numbers

By Pete Guither

So a survey of sheriff's departments in 45 states found that most of them think meth is the biggest problem they're facing.

The White House, however, is not particularly interested in adjusting their high-profile, expensive national campaign to demonize marijuana.

"...the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy restated its stance that marijuana remains the nation's most substantial drug problem. Federal estimates show there are 15 million marijuana users compared to the 1 million that might use meth," according to an article on the survey.

Yep, better focus on those marijuana users. Blogger Wonkette puts it into perspective: "And that numbers thing? You know, there sure are a lot of jaywalkers compared to people who molest children..." ( see http://www.wonkette.com/politics/white-house/wh-has-reefer-madness-111288.php

So why is the Czar acting this way? Simple. Dealing with meth is messy and complex and it doesn't help his numbers [and actually, the ONDCP would take the wrong approach with meth if they were more involved, but that's a different post].

You see, back in the 90's the DEA and ONDCP got failing grades by the GAO for their inability to show that they were actually accomplishing anything (because, of course, they weren't). So the White House set a new goal for the ONDCP: reducing (by specific percentages) the number of illegal drug users in the United States.

Of course, to a lot of people, that sounds like a wonderful goal. But how do you actually accomplish a goal with such wording? Let's say you wanted to help heroin addicts. Well, probably not a good idea -- there aren't that many of them, and it takes a lot of work to get them completely off drugs. Even if you're successful with a lot of them, it would hardly register as far as a percent of drug users.

So where can you get huge numbers and get them to quit easily? Marijuana. It's the one most people use, and it's not even addictive, so quitting is no problem. All you have to do is demonize it and spread the propaganda, and promote drug testing, and you can get a whole lot of people who were just using it now and then for fun to stop. You won't do a thing for people who really have a drug problem, but you'll reach your percentage goals of reducing drug users in the U.S.

This has been driving the entire ONDCP's agenda. Even including blocking medical marijuana (medical marijuana use counts as federal illicit drug use for the purpose of statistics).

An entire national policy based on demonizing people who are causing no harm, and ignoring people who need help. Is that what they call "compassionate conservatism"?

http://www.drugsense.org/dsw/2005/ds05.n407.html#sec6
 
^
So where can you get huge numbers and get them to quit easily? Marijuana. It's the one most people use, and it's not even addictive, so quitting is no problem. All you have to do is demonize it and spread the propaganda, and promote drug testing, and you can get a whole lot of people who were just using it now and then for fun to stop.
I agree, except for the part about marijuana not being addictive. There are people who are addicted to marijuana, and quitting isn't exactly "no problem" for them.
This has been driving the entire ONDCP's agenda. Even including blocking medical marijuana (medical marijuana use counts as federal illicit drug use for the purpose of statistics).
Don't forget about hemp!

Thanks for posting. :)
 
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