Thu 25 Jun 2009
A friend recently directed me toward the website of The Foundation for a Drug-Free World, a Los Angeles-based non-profit whose tagline is “an effective drug education and drug prevention program.” I was shocked and dismayed to see the “drug facts” section (they seem to have a monopoly on “the truth” about drugs), which reads like an amateur 1950s terror campaign.

Marijuana, inexplicably listed under the headline “joints,” apparently will cause you to have a heart attack, and eventually will lead to psychosis.
For MDMA, the complete list of short-term effects is as follows:
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• impaired judgment
• false sense of affection
• confusion
• depression
• sleep problems
• severe anxiety
• paranoia
• drug craving
• muscle tension
• involuntary teeth clenching
• nausea
• blurred vision
• faintness and chills or sweating.
Someone clearly misnamed that drug ecstasy!
Aren’t we past this fear-mongering and misinformation? Even the federal government’s National Institute on Drug Abuse acknowledges that “studies testing the effectiveness of information dissemination or fear-arousal approaches have consistently shown that they do not work.”
To actually reduce our drug abuse and addiction problems (and they are severe [1]), we need better. And we should expect better, even from an organization founded by the Church of Scientology.
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[1] According to the NIDA, in 2006, 23 million people, or nearly 10% of the American population over age 12, needed treatment for an illicit drug or alcohol use problem. Nevertheless, of those 23 million, only 10.8% received treatment, leaving some 21 million without.