News (Media Awareness Project) - US HI: OPED: 'Ice' Use Is A Decision, Not A Curable Disease |
Title: | US HI: OPED: 'Ice' Use Is A Decision, Not A Curable Disease |
Published On: | 2003-08-28 |
Source: | Honolulu Star-Bulletin (HI) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-19 15:20:59 |
'ICE' USE IS A DECISION, NOT A CURABLE DISEASE
I have been bothered for months by the escalating talk of an "ice epidemic" in
Hawaii. Now we have the admission that government authorities have dreamed up a
number (30,000) to attach to ice addicts in Honolulu. They now admit that they
don't know the extent of the problem by number of addicts or users. What also
concerns me is the talk about "treatment" of ice users, as if they are diseased
instead of dumb or self-destructive or both.
"Ice" is an inert substance that is essentially harmless unless ingested. The
user decides to take it into his body. As a general rule, persons of good
character and strong moral fiber do not ingest ice.
Consequently, if we have an epidemic of ice users and abusers, it must be
because we have an enormous pool of persons who lack good character and moral
convictions. Thus, if we have an "epidemic" worse than anywhere else in the
United States, what does that say about Hawaii's people? If you say it means
that we have failed in our efforts to build an effective civil society, I say
you get the point.
To say that we have an "ice epidemic" as if ice is the guilty party is a word
game, and a dangerous one. It implies that we are somehow helpless and
hopeless. Then, we are told that "addicts" need "treatment" -- also a dangerous
word game. The solution is not mechanical, like giving them another drug to
"cure" them. The true solution is to teach values and morals.
If we have an epidemic of users of ice, we must face up to the facts and take
action. That action is to help make families and communities stronger, work on
moral guidance for those who falter and assure consequences for poor judgments.
If we do indeed have an ice-user epidemic, please look to the old comic-strip
character Pogo for the beginning of a solution: "We have met the enemy and he
is us". Then we can drop enabling talk -- like "addiction," "treatment " and
"She used ice" -- as excuses for any sub-standard performances.
Expect the worst or expect the best -- that is our human choice. We will reap
our rewards or consequences from our thinking, talking, writing and acting.
Lies and loose talk from law enforcement and other government officials are
destructive and part of the problem. Let's muzzle them and get started on
really fixing things, at the source. That means you, brother and sister -- and
me.
I have been bothered for months by the escalating talk of an "ice epidemic" in
Hawaii. Now we have the admission that government authorities have dreamed up a
number (30,000) to attach to ice addicts in Honolulu. They now admit that they
don't know the extent of the problem by number of addicts or users. What also
concerns me is the talk about "treatment" of ice users, as if they are diseased
instead of dumb or self-destructive or both.
"Ice" is an inert substance that is essentially harmless unless ingested. The
user decides to take it into his body. As a general rule, persons of good
character and strong moral fiber do not ingest ice.
Consequently, if we have an epidemic of ice users and abusers, it must be
because we have an enormous pool of persons who lack good character and moral
convictions. Thus, if we have an "epidemic" worse than anywhere else in the
United States, what does that say about Hawaii's people? If you say it means
that we have failed in our efforts to build an effective civil society, I say
you get the point.
To say that we have an "ice epidemic" as if ice is the guilty party is a word
game, and a dangerous one. It implies that we are somehow helpless and
hopeless. Then, we are told that "addicts" need "treatment" -- also a dangerous
word game. The solution is not mechanical, like giving them another drug to
"cure" them. The true solution is to teach values and morals.
If we have an epidemic of users of ice, we must face up to the facts and take
action. That action is to help make families and communities stronger, work on
moral guidance for those who falter and assure consequences for poor judgments.
If we do indeed have an ice-user epidemic, please look to the old comic-strip
character Pogo for the beginning of a solution: "We have met the enemy and he
is us". Then we can drop enabling talk -- like "addiction," "treatment " and
"She used ice" -- as excuses for any sub-standard performances.
Expect the worst or expect the best -- that is our human choice. We will reap
our rewards or consequences from our thinking, talking, writing and acting.
Lies and loose talk from law enforcement and other government officials are
destructive and part of the problem. Let's muzzle them and get started on
really fixing things, at the source. That means you, brother and sister -- and
me.
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