Julian Sanchez | March 22, 2006
Via Romenesko, I see my old friend Angela Valdez has a sharp story in Portland's alt-weekly blowing holes in The Oregonian's award-winning series on the state's "meth epidemic." Some of the most dramatic and unsettling "statistics" in the series, it seems, were based not on any actual studies or data, but on what amount to little more than wild guesses. Valdez quotes our own Jacob Sullum, who wrote about the moral panic over meth in September.
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One of the worst things is that most of my friends in the medical marijuana community swallow this disinformation whole. They don't realize that we're all in this together.
I think it's a bigger deal than that. The potential for
backlash, that is.
I mean, you hear all the hype about it--there was just an article
somewhere about Baby Boomer Tweakers--50 of them Nationwide!!!--a
400% Increase!!!!!!, and, you know, you have no interest in Meth,
but you really don't want to have to get a freaking prescription
for a fucking cold.
God fucking dammit.
I just want the fucking Nyquil. Some newspaper in Oregon makes shit
up, I gotta show ID for a can of fucking Nyquil. Only it's late at
the 24-hour CVS, and I ain't seeing nobody on staff, so I gotta go
looking for the guy, but this is the CVS where all the post-high
school dudes behind the counter are busily getting stoned, not the
Indian-run ones, so the staff ain't allowed to check my ID, the
manager has to handle that, and he's somewhere munching his way
through a busted bag of Peanut Chews that the store writes off as
lost, doesn't hear the page, and... time passes.
Fuck you, Oregonian, for making my life on another coast extra hard
with this crap. I'm a citizen, a taxpayer, a productive member of
society, and my cough is too bad to burn one with the
underlings!
/Just saying.
//Thanks, Jacob!!
///Keep hammering this.
accoding to a perhaps even more hyperbole-filled and absurd take
on the meth issue from
USA Today, "Meth is a cheap, highly addictive street derivative
of amphetamine pills; it turns users into automatons willing to
take on risky, street-level crime."
this article ran on the front page of USA today a while back,
accompanied by a cartoon (unfortunately not included in the online
version) of a zombie-eyed cyber criminal sitting at a computer and
shooting up. compared to this, i would say the oregonian article is
a model of responsible journalism.
My wife recently obtained a prescription for Adderal -
amphetamine salts in pill form - with all of 15 minutes
conversation with her doctor.
Guess it's only dangerous if you buy it from a dealer. :)
"Unlike marijuana or ecstasy, Durbin says, meth can hook users
the first time. "Most often within a couple times of use, you're
addicted," he says. "Some people, it's the first time they
use."
I tried meth once with my friend on the night before college
graduation. We were both experienced "experimenters" and got it
from a reliable source who used it every day. Both of us
immediately went to bed. Gimme a break.
Unlike marijuana or ecstasy, Durbin says, meth can hook
users the first time.
I am certain I have read equally "well researched" articles that
say:
Terrorific said: "I tried meth once with my friend on the night
before college graduation. We were both experienced "experimenters"
and got it from a reliable source who used it every day. Both of us
immediately went to bed"
You didn't try meth my friend. Or did you go to bed and have sex
for the next 24 hours...?
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