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Home : News : News : Elections 2008
Elections 2008
We can't let up for an instant in this war
01/27/2005
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Mention the word "war" and you can easily start one of your own. Nationally, the topic is as controversial and as volatile as any in our vocabularies.
But there is one war that is neither controversial nor likely to start an argument. It is one that every one of us should be waging constantly, without ever letting up, because it is too important to the future of our country and to the good health of our citizens for us ever to relent.
That is the war on drugs, particularly as it applies to teenagers.
Teens who experiment with drugs can easily be starting a pattern of destructive behavior that can lead to dire consequences - at the present moment and in the long term as well.
The subject of teen involvement in drugs is one that national studies are used to assess. The question is constantly being asked: Are we winning or losing the war?
As reporter Mark Scott pointed out in a Page 1 story this week, it all depends on whom you ask.
A federal study indicates that drug use among teenagers has declined almost 7 percent over the past year and by 17 percent since 2001.
"There are now 600,000 fewer teens using drugs than there were in 2001, said John Walters, director of the National Drug Control Policy in a report issued by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
That would be wonderful news - if it's true.
But when Scott interviewed several area students, he got some answers that were entirely different - and disturbing.
A Mentor High School student said she believes drug use is going up.
"Kids are starting to drink and use drugs in the seventh and eighth grades," the 18-year-old said.
When told of the national statistics, the student advised not to give too much credence to any teen survey.
"When a test like that comes out, a lot of students don't take it seriously," she said.
One of Lake County's chief drug enforcement officers, Deputy Sheriff Pat Willis, pointed out that it is difficult to obtain accurate information from teen surveys.
Referring to two questions asked in an anonymous survey of seventh-graders, he noted that "what we have found, repeatedly, is that kids think in the area of 85 to 90 percent of seventh-graders have tried alcohol, and 70 to 75 percent are currently using alcohol."
When speaking for themselves, however, 40 percent of teens say they have tried alcohol, and 13 percent say they are using it.
Whichever number may be correct - assuming either one is - it represents a disturbing pattern.
Meanwhile, in Ashtabula County, Sheriff William Johnson said of teen drug use, "I don't see it declining at all."
"Meth is probably the drug of choice," he said, "because you can get the ingredients at your local drug store. But we also still see marijuana and cocaine."
Those are unsettling comments.
Many of those interviewed asserted that the more kids become involved in healthy activities, such as sports and clubs, the less the temptation to experiment with drugs.
A Madison High School senior said involvement in activities can prove to be a great alternative to becoming involved with alcohol and drugs.
"For me, sports and clubs play a huge part in keeping kids off drugs," the 18-year-old said.
Deputy Willis agreed. "It provides someone else that they can have a conversation with and talk to," he said.
School officials pointed out that parental involvement is vital. "If parents are involved, the kids will either prolong the time before they start or they might experiment but get right off them," said Steve Hertrick, an adviser with Madison High's safe and drug-free program.
Every aspect, every battle in the war on drugs is important. Every step and every involvement to keep kids from experimenting is critical.
The war on drugs, especially as it applies to teenagers, is one we cannot afford to lose.
Pursuit of the war must be relentless. Any parent who is not doing his or her part to keep kids drug free contributes to the problem.
Winning the war must be one of our No. 1 national priorities.


©The News-Herald 2010

Reader Comments
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Added: Saturday January 29, 2005 at 12:32 AM EST
You can't be serious.

Any editorial that ends with a capper as idiotic as "Winning the [drug] war must be one of our No. 1 national priorities" -- without even explaining how there can possibly be more than one No. 1 national priority, or how our enforcement-based drug policy can do anything but make selling drugs to children even more lucrative -- is probably not deserving of serious response, but I will say this:

If you truly want to save the lives of children, learn why alcohol prohibition ended. Learn about Pauline Sabin. Learn anything at all.
Ethan Straffin

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