Posts Tagged sense.

Does it make more sense to put CHEMICALLY ADDICTED people in PRISON for POSSESSION or in REHAB?

Addiction is an illness. Narcotics abuse is an illness. Logically, the purchasing, possession and abuse of a drug by an addict is as much of a health concern as it is a legal one.

Narcotics abuse is undoubtedly a more emotionally complicated crime than other nonviolent offenses such as theft and vandalism, but early attempts to curb abuse lacked the necessary breadth to get addicts clean. Incarceration is not an effective method of freeing drug users from the substances on which they depend.

You cannot always beat a beast into submission, and the national “war on drugs,” as it is currently framed, attempts to do just that. It aims to prevent drug abuse and crimes through the enforcement of strict, blanketed penalties for citizens who violate.

Although national policies on drug prohibition state the goal is to promote public health, more funding, both on a national and local level, is allocated toward criminal investigations and prosecution of drug users than toward education and rehabilitation.

The fruitless brute-force methods established at a federal level are also standard at the local level. The Los Angeles Police Department made 26,131 arrests for violent and property-related crimes in 2003, according to a statistical report released by the chief of police.

The same year, the LAPD made 27,486 narcotics arrests. In short, police officers arrested 1,300 more citizens for narcotics violations than for murders, rapes, thefts, aggravated assaults and larcenies combined.

Despite the widespread arrests for narcotics-defined crimes in 2003, the effects the arrests had on usage was negligible. According to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, the number of adult users and abusers remained at a flat line.

Crime statistics show that harsh sentencing for nonviolent drug possession convictions is ineffective in deterring repeat offenses, but further analysis reveals that incarceration for those first offenses could increase the probably of a second offense. Relapse rates are more than 70 percent from all forms of criminal justice interventions and corrections-oriented approaches alone, according to the U.N. Office on Drug and Crime.

California took a step in the right direction in November of 2000 when it passed Proposition 36 – the initiative that allows people with first- and second-time drug possession convictions to receive drug treatment instead of incarceration – but implementation and funding issues have prevented the proposition from being wholly successful.

Officials at the district attorney’s office told the L.A. Weekly that they had expected the primary patients enrolling in the rehabilitation programs to be recreational users – not full-blown addicts. The money allocated to fund rehabilitation programs and medical treatment is insufficient for the more typical, heavily addicted individuals who frequently require longer, more expensive treatments in residential facilities instead of 12-step outpatient program.

Recent state and county cutbacks have been devastating to already strained programs made possible by Prop. 36. To further complicate matters, the sheer size of the county coupled with the lack of money makes proper regulation of the program near impossible to assess.

According to the National Institute on Drug Abuse, effective drug treatment programs combine the necessary medical aid and social services required to get the addicted individual back on track. Prop. 36 has made headway in providing Californians in need with a chance at restored chemical freedom, but without additional well-funded social welfare programs such as job placement services, access to medical and mental health treatment facilities, and counseling services, the success of the legislation is extremely limited.

A more compassionate solution to the drug problem is not only more humane, it’s more cost effective. Every dollar spent on drug and alcohol abuse treatment saves the public $7, according study findings released by the state in 1994.

To successfully combat drug abuse and drug-related crime in California, the state needs to ensure that allocating funding for rehabilitation programs is a priority.

In addition to the court-mandated programs created by Prop. 36, the city needs to make comprehensive voluntary rehabilitation programs accessible to drug addicts who want to change before they’re picked up by the police. The earlier people are given a hand to make the change, the sooner they will.

It’s easy to demonize drug addicts and dismiss jail sentences that still too frequently follow possession convictions, but blame doesn’t create change.

An addict with hopeless prospects has a hard time finding motivation to get clean, but if the society around that addict is willing to offer guidance, support and the promise of brighter future for the willing, the incentive to get sober suddenly becomes tangible .

Compassion must become a fundamental element in the rehabilitation system, and compassion starts with understanding. Prop. 36 was a great start, but there’s still a long road ahead.

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How do you make sense out of life when…..?

-children get randomly killed/tortured

-people in other countries are starving, and no matter what you do to help, not everyone will be fed

-over 50% of death row inmates have brain injury (even though what they did was horrifically wrong, in an abstract sense it reduces their culpability, as some have frontal lobe injury which makes them less able to control their aggression)

-Some people never succeed in life – they have broken brains and succumb to addiction, or a freak accident robs them of a good life

-Some people commit suicide (which is proof that they lost hope completely. One can argue that it was their ‘choice’, but ultimately no event proportional to their pain intervened in their last moments of anguish.)

In essence, all manner of horrible things can happen to anyone.

Effort is not necessarily rewarded.

No matter how good you are, bad can happen to you.

No matter how innocent or faultless you are, you can be victim.

For some people, the odds are rigged depending on luck, genetics or physical and neurological fitness.

Does it all boil down to fitness? Even down to the choices we make, isn’t that somewhat influenced by the cards we are dealt in the beginning (as choices do depend somewhat on our native intelligence and emotional fitness.)

Knowing the above has caused me to become severely depressed and unmotivated. Is it possible to be happy in this sick world without denying what is going on around us?

How do you make sense

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Do you have to have your parents at underage drinking classes if you’re over 18? Doesn’t make sense.?

Ok, I am 20, 21 in just under 6 months, about a month ago I got an underage drinking ticket, zero tolerance, just a couple of beers, pretty sober. Anyways, went to court today, I have to take 3 two hour underage drinking deterrence classes in June, at the cost of $125, and your parents are REQUIRED to go to the first session, which isn’t a problem, but it’s making me question things regarding the drinking law, because at 20, I am two years past what is considered being an adult, so why do my parents have to come? This makes zero sense to me whatsoever. Anyone think it makes sense?
understood 21 is the legal age for consumption, but if 18 is the legal age for being an adult, why should your parents have to come with you to a class when you are out of their control?

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