Bush: Drug abuse down, drug war shifts to Internet: The Swamp
 
The Swamp
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Posted March 1, 2008 10:06 AM
The Swamp

by Mark Silva

President Bush, releasing the 2008 National Drug Control Strategy today, says the report portrays "hopeful progress... in the fight against addiction.''

With a goal of cutting drug abuse among young people by 25 percent during his two terms, Bush says the administration has focused on interdiction "to keep drugs out of the United States,'' abuse-prevention and education and treatment for "those who've fallen prey.''

"These efforts have produced measurable results,'' he said today, in his weekly radio address. "Since 2001, the rate of youth drug abuse has dropped by 24 percent.''

Ecstasy is off 50 percent, methamphetamines off 64 percent, the report concludes.

Suggesting that the fight is shifting to the abuse of prescription pain-killers and other drugs, including those peddled on the Internet, Bush said: "I'm asking Congress to work with my administration to put an end to the illegal sale of highly addictive prescription drugs on the Internet. By working together to meet this goal, we can ensure a safer future for our children.''

See a summary of the White House report today: Download file

And see the president's address here:

This is the text of the president's radio address:

"Good morning. Today, my Administration is releasing our 2008 National Drug Control Strategy. This report lays out the methods we are using to combat drug abuse in America. And it highlights the hopeful progress we're making in the fight against addiction.

When I took office in 2001, our country was facing a troubling rate of drug abuse, particularly among young people. Throughout America, young men and women saw their dreams disrupted by the destructive cycle of addiction. So I committed our Nation to an ambitious goal: In 2002, we began efforts to cut drug use among young people by 25 percent over five years.

Our strategy has three key elements. First, we are working to disrupt the supply of drugs by strengthening law enforcement and partnering with other countries to keep drugs out of the United States. Second, we're working to reduce the demand for drugs through prevention and education programs. And third, we're providing treatment options for those who've fallen prey to addiction.

These efforts have produced measurable results. Since 2001, the rate of youth drug abuse has dropped by 24 percent. Young people's use of marijuana is down by 25 percent. Their use of Ecstasy has dropped by more than 50 percent. And their use of methamphetamine has declined by 64 percent. Overall, an estimated 860,000 fewer young people in America are using drugs today than when we began these efforts.

Our drug control strategy will continue all three elements of this successful approach. It will also target a growing problem -- the abuse of prescription drugs by youth. Unfortunately, many young Americans do not understand how dangerous abusing medication can be. And in recent years, the number of Americans who have died from prescription drug overdoses has increased.

One of the factors behind this trend is the growing availability of highly addictive prescription drugs online. The Internet has brought about tremendous benefits for those who cannot easily get to a pharmacy in person. However, it has also created an opportunity for unscrupulous doctors and pharmacists to profit from addiction.

One victim of such a doctor was Ryan Haight. The young man from California was only 18 when he overdosed on pain killers that were illegally prescribed over the Internet. With only a few clicks of the mouse, Ryan was able to get a prescription from a doctor he had never met and have the pills sent to his front door. The doctor who wrote Ryan's prescription had previously served time in prison for illegally dispensing controlled substances.

We need to prevent tragedies like this from happening in the future. So I'm asking Congress to work with my Administration to put an end to the illegal sale of highly addictive prescription drugs on the Internet. By working together to meet this goal, we can ensure a safer future for our children.

Government action is only one part of the solution to the problem of drug abuse. Others in our society have an important role to play as well. People in the entertainment and sports industries serve as role models to millions of young Americans, and that comes with the responsibility to dispel the notion that drug abuse is glamorous and free of consequences. Teachers, pastors, and parents also have an obligation to help young people develop the character and self-respect to resist drugs. The Federal Government will continue to do its part to keep our young people safe, and I urge all Americans to do the same. Our children deserve nothing less.

Thank you for listening. ''

Comments

I don't know who he thinks he is fooling. His budgets for local drug interdiction has gone down with a corresponding loss of drug teams to go out and attack the problem locally. The results are less arrests which in Orwellian way means less drug use. If he really thinks drug use by kids is down then they better check the Whitehouse on what drug he is using because it must be Rush Limbaugh good.


I don't know who he thinks he is fooling. His budgets for local drug interdiction has gone down with a corresponding loss of drug teams to go out and attack the problem locally. The results are less arrests which in an Orwellian way means less drug use. If he really thinks drug use by kids is down then they better check the Whitehouse on what drug he is using because it must be Rush Limbaugh good.


Give it up already. The war on personal freedom, err, I mean drugs, is a miserable failure.

What' worse is that some democrats talk a good game but they lack the sack to really put an end to the madness that is the WOD.


If we can't win the drug war on the streets , how are we going to win it on the Internet?


From my perspective many USA veterans that are now helpless mentally ill homeless unemployable vets..living on the street get drugs from VA to sell on the street to get money for other drugs.. booze.. and cigarettes. They deserve a better deal...and there is more to come!!


Drug Addicts can be CURED of addiction by a fatal injection of their drug of CHOICE!!!!!

WHACK THE SCUM!!!!!


And in other news about how bu$hco is making America safe for Americans, his TSA employees have stolen $31M from baggage in the last three years.

http://www.boingboing.net/2008/03/01/31-million-worth-of.html


Drug addisction is down? What country is he talking about?


The Bushies have made plenty of $$$$$$$$$ from the WOD.


Of course, Cindy McCain never had to use the internets to illegally obtain her opiates of choice:

http://www.salon.com/news/feature/1999/10/18/drugs/


While it is great that some drug abuse is down, the fact that other drug us is up is another consequence of our prescription drug epidemic. Somehow we have become convinced that we no longer have to confront our problems but simply take a pill to not handle the problem but hide the symptoms.

As the director of Novus Medical Detox, I daily see the ravages caused by prescription drug addiction created by doctors prescribing it to their patients and then the patients either continuing to obtain it or purchasing these drugs on the internet or the street. Probably the worst of these drugs is OxyContin--legal heroin.

Pain is real. I have had to deal with it much of my life first from polio and then from two surgeries. However, there are alternatives to painkillers and they must be tried first. Let's not treat the symptoms but the cause.

Prescription drug addiction is an epidemic and we must do everything we can to stop it before it overwhelms us. Education is a must. Detox and rehab are the only solutions for people who are addicted and have decided that they must change their lives.

Steve Hayes
http://novusdetox.com


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