Pubdate: Fri, 26 Jul 2002
Source: Daily Herald (IL)
Copyright: 2002 The Daily Herald Company
Contact:  http://www.dailyherald.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/107
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine)

STOP THE SPREAD OF WICKED METH

Some start using illegal drugs purely for kicks. And that is true for many 
who make the reckless choice of methamphetamine, or meth, as their personal 
drug of abuse.

But meth isn't always taken to get high.

Asa Hutchinson, director of the Drug Enforcement Administration, explained 
to a gathering in Naperville that meth is becoming increasingly popular 
among soccer moms. The stimulant helps them keep pace with busy schedules, 
or lose weight.

Others use meth to train longer to improve their athletic skills.

No matter the motivation, there are incredibly horrible consequences to 
using this drug. In return for the boost in energy and euphoria it 
produces, this highly addictive drug wreaks havoc on the brain, produces 
paranoia and hallucinations and, in many cases, violent behavior and, in 
other cases, death. Users can go days without sleep, eventually crashing, 
then awakening to start the roller coaster ride again.

Methamphetamine poses grave risks to the drug-free public as well.

It is harmful to make, as well as take, methamphetamine. Chemicals used to 
make meth are highly volatile. Meth labs have blown up, killing and 
injuring the meth cookers, as well as threatening neighbors to those 
apartments and suburban homes that have been converted into clandestine 
meth labs.

The waste generated by meth preparation is highly toxic - exposure to it 
can cause death - and it is costly to clean up. The crude meth labs are 
mini Superfund sites.

Fortunately, meth abuse has not reached crisis proportions here as it has 
in many other parts of the country, particularly rural areas. There are 
users out there, though, and a few labs have been shut down in the suburbs.

But the potential for this alarming trend of escalating meth abuse to make 
its way into the suburbs is real. The number of meth lab seizures in 
Illinois has grown from one in 1996 to 666 in 2001, according to the DEA.

Hutchinson's warnings about meth should he heeded.

Drug abuse prevention educators will have to work hard to overcome apathy 
in youngsters who have been conditioned to believe every illegal drug will 
hurt or kill them, and convince youngsters that meth can, indeed, turn them 
into sick raging animals and take their lives. Keep in mind, too, that meth 
isn't just found in the drug culture. Those who abuse it to lose weight or 
gain energy also have to know of the risks they are taking.

Law enforcement has to be vigilant in containing the growth of meth dealing 
and production in the suburbs.

Meth can't be allowed to spread its misery any further here.
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MAP posted-by: Beth