A very sensible perspective from a father
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/ukne...oungsters.html
A very sensible perspective from a father
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/ukne...oungsters.html
I am dead against drug abuse. But feel that the focus should be on those that sell them in the first place. Those that advocate "stringing up" the users / abusers forget that they could so easily have a member of their family that is either unlucky enough or indeed foolishly enough to consume them.
Anyway, the prisons are full and drug abuse is a wider issue than we think. A different approach is needed for that reason alone.
its not so much the street seller, they themselves are the lower end of the chain (victims users)
go further up you may be surprised who you find up there at the top
and thats why it continues
So let's be tougher on the dealers and execute them it would free up prison space and reduce the supply of drugs on the street
iv had druggies (cannabis users ) tell that many of their friends in the same game , when caught with x amount, then comes court day, the amount read out is much less than was confiscated but obviously they dont complain at the inaccuracies because a lighter sentance can be a bennefit,
any guesses what happened to the rest
Top of the chain being who else but ferrari drivers
As for going soft on the drug taking kids...spare a thought for the victims of some of these drug taking kids....you only gotta look at the papers...houses getting broken into...the elderly getting mugged and sometimes .....string them up I say
The problem is that there is a big demand for most of these drugs
Movie stars, catwalk models, music industry, media types, and the most of the square mile seem to operate on cocaine
I dont think the dealers are forcing anyone to buy their items and if anything they cant supply enough of it
I wonder when they are going to win this WAR ON DRUGS anyway - not in my lifetime thats for sure
What is it that you smoke? Must be good stuff.
I don't think there are many places in the country where there isn't significant drug abuse. I would be very surprised if your neighbourhood is the exception. Have a look in your local paper. You will see many drug related stories each week. What this means is that it exists. What it doesn't mean is that it is being halted. What the public tends to be aware of is just the tip of a larger iceberg.
Drug abuse knows no geographical or social boundaries.
And I second that, I am sorry to say. Sad, but true. Drug abuse is part of our society, like alcoholism, overeating and the smoking of cigarettes. We seem to be winning the war on the consumption of tobacco products but it has taken soooo long to get this far, however there is a lot more hard work to be done with the remaining issues.I wonder when they are going to win this WAR ON DRUGS anyway - not in my lifetime thats for sure
A 2007 story but as far as I know, no different in 2012.
And it doesn't specify that Wiltshire is the exception.
"Drug-related crime costs England and Wales more than £13 billion a year and damages the health of hundreds of thousands of addicts, according to a report.
The UK has the highest levels of addiction and multi-drug consumption and the second-highest rate of drug-related deaths in Europe, the document claimed."
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/ukne...in-Europe.html
Also below:
"Britain has the highest level of problem drug use and the second highest level of drug related deaths in Europe, according to a report by the independent UK Drug Policy Commission.
There has also been a 68 percent increase in the number of recorded drug offences in the last ten years according to the Home Office.
Shadow home secretary Dominic Grieve attacked the government, saying: "No amount of Home Office spin on this year's figures can hide the fact that class A drug use and drug crime have risen under this government."
"
http://www.politics.co.uk/news/2008/...orst-in-europe
"Scotland has again topped the world league for cocaine consumption.
Figures published by the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) show 3.9% of Scottish residents aged between 16 and 64 used the drug in the past year.
That was a higher proportion than in any other country and compares to 2.5% for England and Wales.
The figures also showed Scotland with a rate of heroin use twice that of the rest of the United Kingdom."
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-13898046
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