News (Media Awareness Project) - UK: Column: Confused? You Will Be In This Drugs Debate |
Title: | UK: Column: Confused? You Will Be In This Drugs Debate |
Published On: | 2009-02-10 |
Source: | Independent (UK) |
Fetched On: | 2009-02-10 20:25:50 |
CONFUSED? YOU WILL BE IN THIS DRUGS DEBATE...
I'm planning to tinker with my brain chemistry next week. The method
I'll be adopting is a relatively recent addition to the long list of
mood-altering activities that cascades down the centuries and it
isn't, the statistics confirm, entirely without risk. But I've found
it takes me out of myself - as the saying goes- and I'm inclined to
think that the high I get weighs up reasonably well against the
potential downside.
The white powder I'm intending to employ is known as snow - not
cocaine but the steeply-angled snow of the Alps. And fortunately -
barring a bit of ecological head-shaking - society doesn't yet
disapprove of this particular method of getting a rush. Indeed all the
evidence is that it regards ski-ing as a perfectly acceptable form of
self-endangerment. Should I be injured, no policeman will arrive at
casualty to caution me about potential criminal charges and I can even
pay for insurance against the possibility that something might go wrong.
I confess that I don't entirely understand why this is - or rather I
don't understand why some forms of personal risk-taking are regarded
as morally culpable while others are simply down to personal taste.
I'm with Professor David Nutt, on this one - head of the Advisory
Council on Drugs Misuse, who got himself into trouble over the weekend
for suggesting that there was "not much difference between
horse-riding and ecstasy" when it came to an assessment of potential
social harm.
Cue an entirely predictable spasm of knicker-twisting consternation.
The ACMD distanced itself from his comments (though it, at least, had
some purely tactical grounds for doing so), and commentators called
for his resignation - the ability to think dispassionately about such
matters apparently disqualifying you from serving on a body
specifically tasked with dispassionate thinking. "If his personal view
conflicts so very strongly with his public duties, it would be
honourable to consider his position," suggested one opponent -
effectively arguing that it was Professor Nutt's public duty not to
think at all. His personal view is, after all, quite likely to come
into play if he's appointed to an advisory role - and he wasn't
commenting on the relative attractions of horse-riding and ecstasy (a
subjective matter), but on their relative casualty rates, which is a
matter of hard facts.
Jacqui Smith - who currently has good reason to distract the press -
accused him yesterday of "trivialising" the dangers of ecstasy (when
in truth he was simply attempting to counter the "sensationalising"
that accompanies virtually all political and journalistic discussion
of drugs). She also - and I think only the word "disgusting" does
justice to the craven political opportunism of this request - called
on him to apologise to families whose lives have been damaged by
ecstasy use. I look forward to her similarly calling on the
manufacturers of bicycles (who heedlessly peddle this known hazard to
very young children) to apologise to those bereaved by affected by
road fatalities.
Sadly, her nervous illogic typifies political thinking on this matter.
The ACDM is shortly expected to recommend that ecstasy is downgraded
from a Class A drug to a Class B one. The Government is expected to
ignore them, just as they ignored a previous recommendation about
cannabis. Instead they will take their expert advice from the Daily
Mail and The Sun, those unimpeachable authorities on moral panic
knee-jerk instinct. Come to think of it, Professor Nutt should do the
honourable thing and resign, along with every other member of a body
that now seems to have no purpose other than to make the Government
look good to the tabloids.
A not entirely unexpected victory for the home team
British triumph at the Baftas appeared to be the general top-spin for
Monday's reports on the film award ceremony. Or - as The Sun more
pointedly put it - "Brits Beat Brangelina", as if a foreign invasion
had been pluckily fended off. One doesn't want to sniff at any bit of
good news just now - and I'm very glad that Slumdog's human warmth -
for which its director Danny Boyle collected a an award, left -
defeated the cloying sentiment of Benjamin Button.
But British success at the Baftas is about as unexpected as the news
of Peaches Geldof's divorce. The awards list specifically ring-fences
three prizes as Brits only, and the electorate is overwhelmingly
British, and thus inclined to look fondly upon their own. Besides,
since three out of four of the acting prizes went to outsiders, there
must at least have been a case for the tabloids rolling out their
other stock response to the awards - "British stars robbed at Baftas".
If only we could hear an interview with Keats
I got a letter from the British Library the other day asking me to
sign a licence agreement so that a recording of an ICA talk I once
chaired with the writer Vikram Seth could be made available through
their Archival Recordings website. I blushed to remember the occasion,
which I recall as being an unintended master-class in how not to
conduct a literary conversation.
But I confess that I felt a tiny flicker of pleasure at the
possibility that some assiduous postgraduate might, in 150 years'
time, hear the thing again in the course of researching a doctorate on
Indian literature of late 20th century. Imagine how intriguing it
would be to listen to the voice of Keats, say, however clumsy the
questioning was. And what would you give for a recording in which
Garrick and Dr Johnson did a round-table on Shakespearean
characterisation?
It made me realise that the relationship between posterity and its
heroes is going to be utterly different in the future, far more
intimate and face-to-face. And I quite like the idea of being there on
the sidelines, even as one of posterity's who-he's.
*I was passing through Liverpool Street last Friday night, emerging
from the Tube to find the entire concourse packed with people, and
even more crammed against the balconies to see what had drawn the
crowd. I assumed, from the cheers and the phone cameras held aloft,
that it was a boy band, but it turned out that the crowd had drawn
itself - critical mass being achieved by a flashmob event, which then
sucked in yet more gawpers until the station had to be closed for
safety reasons.
It struck me as a perfect plot for a thriller. Nefarious jihadi puts
advert on Facebook inviting people to a mass chorale of "Yellow Polka
Dot Bikini". Waits until a sufficient density has gathered. Presses
button. No need for all the palaver of going through security. The
casualties assemble themselves. I'll stick to watching these things on
You Tube.
I'm planning to tinker with my brain chemistry next week. The method
I'll be adopting is a relatively recent addition to the long list of
mood-altering activities that cascades down the centuries and it
isn't, the statistics confirm, entirely without risk. But I've found
it takes me out of myself - as the saying goes- and I'm inclined to
think that the high I get weighs up reasonably well against the
potential downside.
The white powder I'm intending to employ is known as snow - not
cocaine but the steeply-angled snow of the Alps. And fortunately -
barring a bit of ecological head-shaking - society doesn't yet
disapprove of this particular method of getting a rush. Indeed all the
evidence is that it regards ski-ing as a perfectly acceptable form of
self-endangerment. Should I be injured, no policeman will arrive at
casualty to caution me about potential criminal charges and I can even
pay for insurance against the possibility that something might go wrong.
I confess that I don't entirely understand why this is - or rather I
don't understand why some forms of personal risk-taking are regarded
as morally culpable while others are simply down to personal taste.
I'm with Professor David Nutt, on this one - head of the Advisory
Council on Drugs Misuse, who got himself into trouble over the weekend
for suggesting that there was "not much difference between
horse-riding and ecstasy" when it came to an assessment of potential
social harm.
Cue an entirely predictable spasm of knicker-twisting consternation.
The ACMD distanced itself from his comments (though it, at least, had
some purely tactical grounds for doing so), and commentators called
for his resignation - the ability to think dispassionately about such
matters apparently disqualifying you from serving on a body
specifically tasked with dispassionate thinking. "If his personal view
conflicts so very strongly with his public duties, it would be
honourable to consider his position," suggested one opponent -
effectively arguing that it was Professor Nutt's public duty not to
think at all. His personal view is, after all, quite likely to come
into play if he's appointed to an advisory role - and he wasn't
commenting on the relative attractions of horse-riding and ecstasy (a
subjective matter), but on their relative casualty rates, which is a
matter of hard facts.
Jacqui Smith - who currently has good reason to distract the press -
accused him yesterday of "trivialising" the dangers of ecstasy (when
in truth he was simply attempting to counter the "sensationalising"
that accompanies virtually all political and journalistic discussion
of drugs). She also - and I think only the word "disgusting" does
justice to the craven political opportunism of this request - called
on him to apologise to families whose lives have been damaged by
ecstasy use. I look forward to her similarly calling on the
manufacturers of bicycles (who heedlessly peddle this known hazard to
very young children) to apologise to those bereaved by affected by
road fatalities.
Sadly, her nervous illogic typifies political thinking on this matter.
The ACDM is shortly expected to recommend that ecstasy is downgraded
from a Class A drug to a Class B one. The Government is expected to
ignore them, just as they ignored a previous recommendation about
cannabis. Instead they will take their expert advice from the Daily
Mail and The Sun, those unimpeachable authorities on moral panic
knee-jerk instinct. Come to think of it, Professor Nutt should do the
honourable thing and resign, along with every other member of a body
that now seems to have no purpose other than to make the Government
look good to the tabloids.
A not entirely unexpected victory for the home team
British triumph at the Baftas appeared to be the general top-spin for
Monday's reports on the film award ceremony. Or - as The Sun more
pointedly put it - "Brits Beat Brangelina", as if a foreign invasion
had been pluckily fended off. One doesn't want to sniff at any bit of
good news just now - and I'm very glad that Slumdog's human warmth -
for which its director Danny Boyle collected a an award, left -
defeated the cloying sentiment of Benjamin Button.
But British success at the Baftas is about as unexpected as the news
of Peaches Geldof's divorce. The awards list specifically ring-fences
three prizes as Brits only, and the electorate is overwhelmingly
British, and thus inclined to look fondly upon their own. Besides,
since three out of four of the acting prizes went to outsiders, there
must at least have been a case for the tabloids rolling out their
other stock response to the awards - "British stars robbed at Baftas".
If only we could hear an interview with Keats
I got a letter from the British Library the other day asking me to
sign a licence agreement so that a recording of an ICA talk I once
chaired with the writer Vikram Seth could be made available through
their Archival Recordings website. I blushed to remember the occasion,
which I recall as being an unintended master-class in how not to
conduct a literary conversation.
But I confess that I felt a tiny flicker of pleasure at the
possibility that some assiduous postgraduate might, in 150 years'
time, hear the thing again in the course of researching a doctorate on
Indian literature of late 20th century. Imagine how intriguing it
would be to listen to the voice of Keats, say, however clumsy the
questioning was. And what would you give for a recording in which
Garrick and Dr Johnson did a round-table on Shakespearean
characterisation?
It made me realise that the relationship between posterity and its
heroes is going to be utterly different in the future, far more
intimate and face-to-face. And I quite like the idea of being there on
the sidelines, even as one of posterity's who-he's.
*I was passing through Liverpool Street last Friday night, emerging
from the Tube to find the entire concourse packed with people, and
even more crammed against the balconies to see what had drawn the
crowd. I assumed, from the cheers and the phone cameras held aloft,
that it was a boy band, but it turned out that the crowd had drawn
itself - critical mass being achieved by a flashmob event, which then
sucked in yet more gawpers until the station had to be closed for
safety reasons.
It struck me as a perfect plot for a thriller. Nefarious jihadi puts
advert on Facebook inviting people to a mass chorale of "Yellow Polka
Dot Bikini". Waits until a sufficient density has gathered. Presses
button. No need for all the palaver of going through security. The
casualties assemble themselves. I'll stick to watching these things on
You Tube.
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