News (Media Awareness Project) - CN BC: Column: The Drug Connection?? |
Title: | CN BC: Column: The Drug Connection?? |
Published On: | 2006-09-06 |
Source: | 100 Mile House Free Press (CN BC) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-13 03:40:29 |
THE DRUG CONNECTION??
Hospitals report that as many as half of their emergency admissions
are intoxicated.
Panhandlers puff cigarettes as they collect cash from those who don't
notice or care where their money is going.
Police report again and again that nearly all their low-level property
crime is drug-related, with a few hard-core actors doing most of it.?
The big-city debate continues in Orwellian language, defending "safe"
injection sites that can't possibly be safe and needle "exchange"
programs where dirty needles are discarded on sidewalks and parks.?
Perhaps the ultimate solution is to provide hard-core addicts with not
only free shelter and medical care but free drugs as well. But I don't
think the public is ready to surrender that completely.?
Solicitor General John Les has high hopes for the drug court pilot
program in Vancouver that was extended for three years by the federal
and provincial government. It sentences chronic offenders to treatment
rather than jail.??
Hospitals report that as many as half of their emergency admissions
are intoxicated.
Panhandlers puff cigarettes as they collect cash from those who don't
notice or care where their money is going.
Police report again and again that nearly all their low-level property
crime is drug-related, with a few hard-core actors doing most of it.?
The big-city debate continues in Orwellian language, defending "safe"
injection sites that can't possibly be safe and needle "exchange"
programs where dirty needles are discarded on sidewalks and parks.?
Perhaps the ultimate solution is to provide hard-core addicts with not
only free shelter and medical care but free drugs as well. But I don't
think the public is ready to surrender that completely.?
Solicitor General John Les has high hopes for the drug court pilot
program in Vancouver that was extended for three years by the federal
and provincial government. It sentences chronic offenders to treatment
rather than jail.??
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