News (Media Awareness Project) - US MS: PUB LTE: What About Helping Parents? |
Title: | US MS: PUB LTE: What About Helping Parents? |
Published On: | 2002-10-26 |
Source: | Sun Herald (MS) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-21 21:32:43 |
WHAT ABOUT HELPING PARENTS?
I saw in the newspaper recently that the Office of National Drug Control
Policy had decided that helping a teen who uses marijuana is a better
approach than punishing him. The National Education Association
representative said that if you punish a child by expulsion, "Where's he
going to go?"
Well, he can't go home. Either the parents are working two jobs to pay the
bills and cannot supervise the kid, or they are headed for their own
punishment for using some drug.
Most kids who drink alcohol or use drugs or smoke cigarettes learned it
first through their parents. In fact one in five adults in Mississippi has
used (or still uses) marijuana. What's going to happen to these kids when
their parents are punished for the non-violent crime of smoking a joint?
There are already nearly 300,000 kids in Mississippi foster care because
their parents are in jail.
How does this help the kids? How does this help the parents? Is drug use so
prevalent that finally the government is realizing that they can't put 20
percent of the population out of commission? Are they now going soft on the
crime that brings them the highest revenue?
Is this so-called "new idea" of helping those with drug problems an
admission that for the last 50 years they have been taking the wrong
approach to drug abuse? Or did some high-ranking politician's kids get
expelled recently?
MELODY WORSHAM Biloxi District 5 representative Mississippi Libertarian
Party Doglady19@yahoo.com
I saw in the newspaper recently that the Office of National Drug Control
Policy had decided that helping a teen who uses marijuana is a better
approach than punishing him. The National Education Association
representative said that if you punish a child by expulsion, "Where's he
going to go?"
Well, he can't go home. Either the parents are working two jobs to pay the
bills and cannot supervise the kid, or they are headed for their own
punishment for using some drug.
Most kids who drink alcohol or use drugs or smoke cigarettes learned it
first through their parents. In fact one in five adults in Mississippi has
used (or still uses) marijuana. What's going to happen to these kids when
their parents are punished for the non-violent crime of smoking a joint?
There are already nearly 300,000 kids in Mississippi foster care because
their parents are in jail.
How does this help the kids? How does this help the parents? Is drug use so
prevalent that finally the government is realizing that they can't put 20
percent of the population out of commission? Are they now going soft on the
crime that brings them the highest revenue?
Is this so-called "new idea" of helping those with drug problems an
admission that for the last 50 years they have been taking the wrong
approach to drug abuse? Or did some high-ranking politician's kids get
expelled recently?
MELODY WORSHAM Biloxi District 5 representative Mississippi Libertarian
Party Doglady19@yahoo.com
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