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NEWS: The Punch - 7/09/2010 'Youths’ code of silence on hard drug use'

hoptis

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Youths’ code of silence on hard drug use
Lydia Sawtell
07 Sep 05:45am

A 21st birthday, with a house full of family and grandparents. The birthday girl and all her friends come from middle class families who are supportive and loving. They all attended good schools, work casually, go to uni and have active social lives.

It sounds like a scene of suburban tranquillity, so why is the only thing going through my head is: am I only the person who’s noticed that the birthday girl and many of the friends are completely wasted on drugs?

Talking to the mum and another girl, all I can think is ‘how can she not notice? She has to know. Is she too embarrassed to say something?’

It seems not so long ago that even talking about drugs was controversial. Back then, I thought coke was something you bought from the corner store and poured down your throat, not something you bought from the shifty looking guy and snorted up your nose.

Drugs have become normalised and glamorised, and are very much part of young people’s lives, whether we take it or are surrounded by it.

According to the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare’s 2007 National Drug Strategy Household Survey, 54% of people aged 20-29 have used illicit drugs at least once in their lifetime, and were the most likely to have in the last 12 months compared to any other age groups.

The 21st birthday came ahead of the Ben Cousins documentary and the ensuing debate about whether it was suitable for children and teenagers to watch. Many people said it would be a good opportunity for parents to open up a discussion about drugs and discourage their children from following in his footsteps.

But most teenagers and young adults already know about drugs, and despite the consequences many continue to take them. The documentary should act as a wake up call to parents that a superstar footballer son, or a pretty, smart and intelligent daughter is likely to have taken or been offered illegal drugs.

The lesson of the Cousins documentary is that there is no typical drug taker. More often that not, it’s the ones you least expect. Some of my closest friends, even those who I’ve mentally pigeonholed into my “non-drug taking friend category”, were eventually convinced by boyfriends or other close friends to try it.

Neighbours, friends, family, school captains, football players, high achievers and everyone in between take drugs recreationally. Their parents have no idea, choose to ignore it or are too afraid to know more.

The most powerful statement in the whole documentary was from Bryan Cousins who said, “by the time parents find out, your in real strife”.

If your teenager is coming home more than once a fortnight or month from a party or night out in the early (or late) hours of Sunday morning, there’s a good chance that they’re doing that with the help of controlled substances.

From watching those around me, such benders are a common occurence.
Some parents would be mortified to find out their child pops pills at music festivals or does a line of speed in the toilets of a club.

But am I just as bad for not telling them? There’s an unofficial code of silence between young people and their friends. We’re determined not to let people know about the drug taking, for no reason other than not wanting to be the one held responsible.

The biggest drug dealers in my surrounding suburbs are all well known, but know one would ever dob them in.

Unfortunately not being a “casual” drug taker is out of the norm. I doubt this is going to change any time soon. If one good thing comes out of the Ben Cousins documentary, it should be that parents take note of warning signs and question their children.

Far too many young people are acting like a priest during the week and a devil on the weekend — even if they’re at their own 21st and grandma’s in the next room.



The Punch
 
Some encouraging signs amongst the 144 comments to this blog post so far, and as always, many reminders of the kind of uphill battle we face.

Louis says:
11:23am | 07/09/10

As usual all the left-leaning pro-drugs people come out of the woodwork as soon as anyone mentions the possibility of the evils of illicit drug use. As a 26-year old male I know I am in the minority of my generation to have never touched an illicit drug. Sure I drink, sometimes to excess, but I am pleased of the fact I have never touched an illicit drug. Unsure of whether that makes me boring or not, but at the end of the day its my choice and I’m not about to change.

But seriously, the fact that people continue to spout garbage like “drugs are fun”, “promote lateral thinking”, or “aren’t the main problem like alcohol and cigarettes” really starts to wear thin. First of all, I’m pretty sure these drugs are illegal for a reason. It has been well documented that illicit drugs cause things such as schitzophrenia and other mental health issues. And if anyone trots out the whole “alcohol and cigarettes are worse” line, then why are they legal? They’re bad in excess yes, but I highly doubt its due to tax revenue. Australian governments are not evil enough to kill the population like that through profit.

I also know exactly what I’m getting when I have a open a bottle of beer - beer. How many of you “recreational drug users” can firmly state that what you ingested was “definately” what you paid for? Those drugs are cut with all sorts of rubbish. I recently lived in the UK and some of the drugs are being cut with items ranging from dishwashing detergent to shards of glass.I’m sure the drugs-brigade will come out and try to prove me wrong, but seriously, if you want to put that crap into your bodies (along with the actual drug) then frankly you’re stupid.

I also don’t buy into this whole “addiction is a disease”. If you’re stupid enough to try it initially then I hold no sympathy for any addiction that follows. It is your fault for getting into that mess. I don’t care what petty excuse you come up with.

There are two main problems I think. First is the justice system. Perhaps if we didn’t continue to give morons with drug offences such light taps on the wrists then we wouldn’t have as much of a problem, but the politically correct brigade has ensured we focus on rehabilitation and counselling rather than punishment. This also applies to the dickheads who under the effects of alcohol bash and maim people. The other is this image that recreational drug use is perfectly acceptable in modern society; glamourous, a mark of success, all the celebrities doing it. I accept this won’t change, but it is a sad reflection on society when illicit drugs are the only way to “have a fun night”.
 
"If your teenager is coming home more than once a fortnight or month from a party or night out in the early (or late) hours of Sunday morning, there’s a good chance that they’re doing that with the help of controlled substances."

I know lots of non drug users that only use alcohol to party well into the hours of Sunday. I need drugs to do it but a lot of people can do it


"The biggest drug dealers in my surrounding suburbs are all well known, but know one would ever dob them in."

^^ Sign of a great journalist? If a drug fucked 19 year old can pick that up, what's his excuse?
 
"I highly doubt its due to tax revenue. Australian government are not evil enough to kill the population like that through profit."


HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAAHAHA..

That cunt is in for a sad wake up call one day soon. Or maybe not!

THEY DO IT AT THEIR EXPENSE BY ADDING FUCKING FLUORIDE TO THE WATER SUPPLY MATE! WHY WOULDNT THEY PUSH DEADLY CIGGIES ON THE PUBLIC...

Some people are beyond help, that guy is EVERYTHING that is wrong with our society.
 
Haha esoteric agenda tripppar? As for the social drinker commentator, I bet all he talks about is football and cars. Must remember though, there are many stupid drug abusers out there that cause people like him to construct such a view. Same fir alcohol but hey, it's legal isn't it? Deaths of pit smokers opposed to cigerette smokers? Alcohol violence opposed to MDMA viloence? Duuuuuuuude. Same sad arguements over and over. I hate drawing circles let alone spending my time walkng around in one.
 
That journo is a goose.

How in the fuck do you get away with publishing an article with gramatical errors that are so blatant?

Perhaps this idiot needs to get on drugs, might teach him how to spell?
 
After first reading that article I thought it was written by a highschool student for their school newsletter or something. Very poor journalism.

And that comment is riddled with logical errors. I wouldn't know where to begin rebutting it.
 
A 21st birthday, with a house full of family and grandparents
Why the fuck was the journo there???


I nearly feel sorry for this Louis guy, nearly. I guess it shows how naiive some people are.
What a lemming.
 
Comments like "I'm pretty sure they're illegal for a reason" and "...then why are they legal?" just shows that this Louis person is simply another brainwashed idiot who sustains themself on government propaganda. I tend to ignore such people.
 
There is no way that the Australian government is addicted to alcohol and ciggy revenue and of course they are safe drugs!

Just like there is no way any state government is addicted to poker machine revenue, they are a vital part of our social fabric - what on earth would all the welfare recipients do with their allowances if there were no poker machines?

That journo is a bigger tool than most of our dickhead wowser politicians.
 
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Comments like "I'm pretty sure they're illegal for a reason" and "...then why are they legal?" just shows that this Louis person is simply another brainwashed idiot who sustains themself on government propaganda. I tend to ignore such people.

This, more or less. Anyone who isn't even willing to question the government on issues isn't worth the time of day.
 
*Yawn* Man sum threads are starting to get boring. Hearing the same crap over n over again with nothing making sense. Useless journos and their BS. Their facts are mostly wrong and they dont know what they are talking about. I can copy n paste shit like that too and modify it a bit.
 
I think most parents know, their not stupid.. it's a narrow line to cross in deciding whether to confront the teenager or not.

If you confront them, you run the risk of potentially damaging any existing trust or form of open communication between them, teenagers will continue to use whether their parents know or not, the more the parents project anger and disappointment.. the greater lengths the teenager will go in order to use, and the worse the home environment will become, which is where it enters extremes.

The silence is an act of maintaining harmony, which can only last so long. In my experience, living a double life for years eventually broke me down and lead me to take responsibility for my own actions, so that i could be me without pretending. If your old enough to support yourself independently, you shouldn't be concerned with peoples opinions, even those of your family.
 
I think most parents know, their not stupid.. it's a narrow line to cross in deciding whether to confront the teenager or not.

If you confront them, you run the risk of potentially damaging any existing trust or form of open communication between them, teenagers will continue to use whether their parents know or not, the more the parents project anger and disappointment.. the greater lengths the teenager will go in order to use, and the worse the home environment will become, which is where it enters extremes.

The silence is an act of maintaining harmony, which can only last so long. In my experience, living a double life for years eventually broke me down and lead me to take responsibility for my own actions, so that i could be me without pretending. If your old enough to support yourself independently, you shouldn't be concerned with peoples opinions, even those of your family.

The problem of course is when it goes the other way and the parents are hiding it from the children, not the children hiding it from the parents

Also DJEP, you can add "road safety cameras" to that list of things, they are there to slow people down, not to blatantly raise revenue, 3km tolerance PFFFT!
 
This, more or less. Anyone who isn't even willing to question the government on issues isn't worth the time of day.

I can't believe the extent to which some people blindly trust the government to not only know what's best for the people, but to actually do it. Policymakers are rarely out to make the world a better place :\

Wouldn't it be nice...
 
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