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  • EADD Moderators: Pissed_and_messed | Shinji Ikari

NPS Act V1. Blankets? Just Say No!

ACMD criticises new bill - http://www.politics.co.uk/blogs/2015/07/03/legal-highs-bill-savaged-by-home-secretary-s-own-advisers

The deafening chorus of criticism over the psychoactive substances bill grew even louder today when the home secretary's own drug advisers launched a blistering attack on it.

It's damning stuff. They found that what the legislation intends to do is "impossible" and that "psychoactivity", the very effect the bill is trying to outlaw, "cannot be unequivocally proven". They are singing from the same hymn sheet as all the chemists, legal experts and sensible commentators who have looked at it. This is a Micky Mouse bill, dealing with a cartoonish reality which bears no connection to the way substances interact with the human body in the real world.

Will it make a difference? Undoubtably not. One of the primary functions of the psychoactive substances bill is to sideline the council, mostly because it keeps on doing things like this. The council works on the basis of evidence gathering and assessment of harm, both concepts which the bill turns its back on. But it is still worth looking at the council's eight objections, which offer a concise account of some, but by no means all, of the problems in the bill.

1) The omission of the word 'novel' has widened the scope of the bill beyond that originally intended.


The council is no libertarian think tank. It actually supports a blanket ban on new psychoactive substances. But even from this very conservative perspective, the government's position still looks barmy. As the council says:

"It is almost impossible to list all possible desirable exemptions under the bill. As drafted, the bill may now include substances that are benign or even helpful to people, including evidence-based herbal remedies that are not included on the current exemption list."

3) The bill uncouples the concept of harm from control of supply, importation and production

This seems simple. Why doesn't the government insert the word 'harmful' into its definition of psychoactive substance, thereby getting rid of nonsense examples like nutmeg above? Because to do so brings back evidence and testing to a law which is intended to eradicate them from drug policy.

The Home Office realises the danger of reason in an unreasonable pursuit. 'Harm' tests act as a thin end of the wedge for a liberal drug policy, because once you show that a drug is essentially harmless, as laughing gas is, you have to accept its legitimate use. This strain of thought has long been present in the Home Office. After all, the council's former chairman, David Nutt, was sacked for, among other things, outlining the statistical similarity between the dangers of horse-riding and ecstasy. For drug prohibition to continue it is essential that the reality of harm is not documented or taken into consideration. As the council says:

"Without the inclusion of the words 'harmful' or 'potentially harmful', the ACMD can envisage situations whereby the supplier of benign or beneficial substances could be prosecuted under the bill."

The Home Office doesn't care.

4) The bill could seriously inhibit medical and scientific research on psychoactive substances.


The council concedes that there's an exemption for psychoactive substances in clinical trials, but points out there's no exemption for laboratory research in academia or industry. Many scientists, particularly in universities, are extremely worried about this. As prominent scientists wrote to the home secretary last week, a researcher who develops a new substance which could help combat depression will currently be in contravention of the law if they do volunteer trials.

5) The bill has the potential to both criminalise and apply disproportionate penalties to many otherwise law abiding young people and adults.

One of the few things thing the bill did right was not criminalise possession – just production and supply. But the legal definition of supply stretches much further than people think it does. If one guy goes online to buy this stuff and then shares it with his mates, that's supply. As the council says:

"The ACMD believes that criminal justice sanctions would be disproportionate to the harm caused by such acts. The inclusion of social supply in the bill also has the potential to result in discriminatory impact on members of black and minority ethnic groups, given what is known about the over-representation of members of these groups at each stage of the criminal justice response to drug offences."

6) The bill is likely to lead to the closure of many 'headshops', the reduction of the direct sale of novel psychoactive substances to children, and the 'normalisation' of sale of these substances in shops. However, the evidence-base for individual supply reduction interventions on a market is poor and the evidence that there is indicates that disrupting a supply market often leads to displacement of that market.

As has been well documented, the war on drugs is like a balloon full of air. Squeeze one bit and it expands elsewhere. That's true for trade routes and it's true for drug provision too. The bill will kill headshops – the council is right about that – but that trade will not disappear. As with other drugs, it will go to the dealers and, increasingly, the online marketplaces. Once the trade goes underground it is even harder to communicate with those who need safety information about the substances they are consuming.

7) 'Directors' of many premises and venues may be liable to prosecution for 'supplying and/or importing' novel psychoactive substances

The law of unintended consequences. The bill makes 'directors' of premises where the drugs are taken or supplied liable to prosecution. But most of these legal highs don't show up on drug tests (which, incidentally, is why their use in prison has soared) and they're not recognised by drug dogs. So if the law is properly enforced we can expect to see a tidal wave of prosecutions against bars, pubs, nightclubs, hostels, prisons and festivals. And that's not even to mention residential property.

8 ) The bill would have a substantial impact on the sale of many herbal medicines.

Plenty of herbal medicines are useless and function as an informal tax on gullibility. Some have evidence of being beneficial. Most are not registered, which would grant them an exemption. So regardless of whether they are slightly useful or not, they are about to be needlessly wiped out by a law which was never intended to have anything to do with them.

Almost every expert who casts their eye over this bill comes away startled by its stupidity and certain that it will not work. It would either involve arresting everyone - all prison governors, all bar owners, everyone who sells incense, the list goes on - or, more likely, as in Ireland it will involve arresting no-one.

The chorus of criticism is deafening. The only place where the bill has not faced any substantial criticism at all is in the Commons chamber. And it will likely stay that way until it is passed. MPs have no interest in evidence. And that partly explains how this bill could be allowed to exist in the first place.
 
As I've tried to say Ismene - the government ignores the advice of the ACMD - even going so far as going in the opposite direction of the councils advice.(Upgrade of cannabis to class b of MODA, failiure to lower MDMA to class b).

When the Misuse of Drugs Act went into law, part of the bill stated that the government should only control a drug, or consider moving a controlled drug up or down a class following consultation with a proscribed panel of drug experts - so the ACMD was created to provide support and evidence for this area of policy.

It started with Prof. Nutts sacking, but the incident was so bold and disgusting that following this ministers have become confident enough to continue shaping policy with little or no guidance from the ACMD. Since mephedrone (which the ACMD were actually consulted about, albeit without Prof. Nutt who has some interesting information regarding the recording and reporting of mephedrone related health problems) the government has banned over 500 drugs with little or no harm assessment from the ACMD.

And it gets worse - the creation and input of the ACMD was a condition set down in the Misuse of Drugs Act, and from the word go the government have been keen to point out that the 'blanket ban' (The New/Novel Psycoactive Substance Bill) is a COMPLETELY different piece of legislation, one that requires NO INPUT AT ALL from the ACMD, in either its inception or implication.
 
P.s

I didnt realise just how far the government had gone to undermine the ACMD's ability to provide evidence based advice - The 2011 'Police Reform and Social Responsibility Act' removed the legal requirement to have SCIENTISTS and DRUG EXPERTS on the council.

I give up. Drug Policy in the UK has been sliding to the right ever since Jaqui Smiths tenure at the home office, and has been accelerating under my nose without me even realising it. Guess i shouldn't have spent the last 20 years high or i might have noticed.
 
Tobacco,Alcohol and acetaminophen have killed more people then war and disease in history put together


Your links do not support this statement. Give me the stats for how many people have died from war and disease in history ever.

Get me the stats for how many people have died from booze fags and paracetamol *in history* and it still won't beat flu !
 
Driven further underground? Nah.. this would be the ideal time to ask for medical help if you have a RC benzo habit... as a benzo addict you can still take some responsibility and ask doctors for a supervised taper/detox, instead of choosing to be the victim who's driven underground and then just ordering moar from the Silk Road or wherever.
Silk road was shut down ages ago :(
 
If only I could grow my own benzos I wouldn't have to worry about supply . and the syth is just ridiculously hard , wouldn't b surprised if drugs like ghb ketamine chloral start resurfacing
 
Something like 215,265 deaths from tobacco n alcohol but let's ban the the RC benzos for god sake , what a sad day.
 
Don't abuse it , appreciate it then taper slow not rocket science , and if u genuinely need it then stay on it.
 
rc benzos are probably the most dangerous thing in the legal market at the moment in the uk, no regulation, no oversight, I'd put them right up there with alcohol and tobacco in terms of danger.
 
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