Pubdate: Mon, 17 Sep 2007
Source: Oregon Daily Emerald (U of Oregon, OR Edu)
Copyright: 2007 Oregon Daily Emerald
Contact:  http://www.dailyemerald.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1518
Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v07/n702/a06.html
Author: Josh Grenzsund, Columnist
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?225 (Students - United States)

HAVE A GOOD TRIP, SEE YOU NEXT FALL...MAYBE

Congratulations. You've made the cut to attend this illustrious West 
Coast institution - an NCAA powerhouse, home of respected 
environmental law, journalism and physics programs, and bastion of 
pseudo-hippie illicit drug use.

In short there's something for everyone. And as you make your way 
through this establishment, the classes you choose to take over the 
next four years will make up one significant part of your 
professional identity. Choose wisely, because your academic major 
will greatly define you - both in the work force and in the social world.

The other very significant aspect of the construction of your 
professional and social identities will depend on how you approach 
the non-academic "recreational" aspect of college life. Sure, 
recreation can mean clubs, organizations and sports, but let's cut 
the crap. College recreation orbits around two large social objects - 
alcohol and drugs.

Your overall identity will greatly be defined by your participation 
in these areas over the next four years because your use or non-use 
will greatly influence who you associate with, the activities you 
partake in and your relationship with the law.

For those of you abstaining from every substance from heroin to 
caffeine, I can't relate to you, so you should stop reading this. The 
next time I have any interaction with you straight-edged freaks will 
probably be when I'm voting for your opponent in some election or 
fighting one of your proposed constitutional amendments to limit 
individual rights.

For those of you who are currently recreating or considering trying 
something harder than Dutch Bros, don't just follow the crowd, do a 
little research and approach your enrollment in drug courses sensibly.

Anti-drug propaganda teaches you to parrot out the phrase that 
"marijuana is the gateway drug," but two other substances lead more 
people to illegal substance abuse - alcohol and tobacco.

CDC statistics on substance use among high school students show that 
by their senior year 47 percent of students have tried alcohol and 23 
percent have tried tobacco, while only 19 percent have tried marijuana.

Interestingly, the use of these "big three" substances remains fairly 
stable from high school into the 18-25 young adult age group. 
Nationwide about 53 percent of young adults drink alcohol, 23 percent 
smoke cigarettes, and 16 percent smoke marijuana, according to CDC 
and Department of Health and Human Services statistics.

Of course most of the stigma associated with the illegality of 
students' use of alcohol and tobacco is mitigated by the fact that 
people age out of the illegality of those substances. Conversely, 
marijuana is among the drugs listed on Federal and State Controlled 
Substance Schedules, so a user of marijuana maintains this stigma of 
illegality.

Controlled substances are broken into five categories, or schedules, 
that correspond with the severity of the penalty for use, production 
or possession. Schedule one drugs include heroin, LSD, ecstasy, 
peyote, mescaline, psilocybin and marijuana. Schedule two drugs are 
opium, cocaine and methamphetamine, while schedule three drugs are 
amphetamine, depressants and PCP.

This is information you should definitely consider before seeking out 
and taking drugs. The surprise, to me anyhow, is that marijuana is 
listed on schedule one while something as destructive as meth is on 
schedule two. But these schedules are greatly arbitrary and should 
only be used to gauge the level of relative illegality of drugs.

In truth, any drug can screw up your life, and there are plenty of 
"lifelong abstainers" who have screwed up professional and personal 
lives without the help of any drugs at all.

Conversely, many people have very successful lives after using drugs. 
Though he used cocaine, you will see that Sigmund Freud still carries 
massive sway in academics. Though Bill Clinton smoked pot, we elected 
him president for two terms. Even presidential hopeful Barack Obama 
has admitted to smoking pot - and inhaling. He also smokes cigarettes 
and still he has a great chance at the presidency.

Use of certain drugs and abstention from others in college will 
ingratiate you to some people and mark you as a pariah to others. For 
example, you heavy pot smokers are probably not hanging out much with 
those who draw the line with Coke - the drink, not the powder. And 
you straight-edgers - I told you to stop reading - you probably don't 
spend time at bars and kegs. Your drug use transcript is a social 
code for who and what you want to be associated with, and what you don't.

Also, as society changes, the attitudes towards the past or current 
use of certain substances will go in and out of favor and there is 
always the possibility that drug laws established in the early part 
of the 20th century will be overturned. Remember the 18th and 21st 
amendments - goodbye prohibition, and good riddance.

In our country, illegality of a substance does not end its use and 
likewise legality does not translate to ubiquitous use. But also, 
your drug use or abstention will influence your relation to the law, 
to society, and will likely affect you for the rest of your life.

But it's a free country, and you are completely free to break the 
law. So, welcome to the University of Oregon, keep your arms and legs 
inside at all times, and if you so choose, enjoy your trip : ).

The Drug Enforcement Agency says that more than one in 10 of you will.
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom