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- <text id=93TT0252>
- <title>
- July 26, 1993: Choose Your Poison
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- July 26, 1993 The Flood Of '93
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- DRUGS, Page 56
- Choose Your Poison
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>While the government boasts that drug use has fallen, the range
- of intoxicants has increased, ensnaring a new generation
- </p>
- <p>By JILL SMOLOWE--With reporting by Ann Blackman/ Washington, Massimo Calabresi/New
- York and Jeanne McDowell/Los Angeles
- </p>
- <p> In New York City's Spanish Harlem, the highs come cheap. To
- create a "blunt," teenagers slice open a cigar and mix the tobacco
- with marijuana. To enhance the hit, they fashion "B-40s" by
- dipping the cigar in malt liquor. In Atlanta, police observed
- 100 teenagers and young adults at a rave party in an abandoned
- house--the rage among middle-class youths everywhere with
- money to burn--and their rich assortment of hooch: pot, uppers,
- downers, heroin, cocaine and Ecstasy, a powerful amphetamine.
- In Los Angeles, Hispanic gangs chill out by dipping their cigarettes
- in PCP (phencyclidine, an animal tranquilizer), while black
- gangs still favor rock cocaine. Some of the city's Iranians
- go in for smoking heroin, known as "chasing the tiger," while
- Arabs settled in Detroit prefer khat, which gives an amphetamine-like
- high and is also the drug of choice in Somalia.
- </p>
- <p> The high times may be a changin', but America's drug scene is
- as frightening as ever. Last week the University of Michigan
- released a survey showing a rise in illicit drug use by American
- college students, with the most significant increase involving
- hallucinogens like LSD. Meanwhile a canvas of narcotics experts
- across the country indicated that while drug fashions vary from
- region to region and class to class, crack use is generally
- holding steady and heroin and marijuana are on the rise. Junior
- high and high school students surveyed by the government report
- a greater availability of most serious drugs. Law officials
- and treatment specialists on the front lines of the drug war
- report that the problem transcends both income and racial differences.
- "When it comes to drugs, there is a complete democracy," says
- Clark Carr, executive director of Narconon Professional Center
- in North Hollywood, California.
- </p>
- <p> The government paints a much brighter picture. According to
- the 1992 Household Survey on Drug Abuse, released last month
- by the Department of Health and Human Services, the nationwide
- pattern of drug abuse is in decline. The study shows an 11%
- dip in illicit drug use by Americans 12 years or older, from
- 12.8 million in 1991 to 11.4 million in 1992. The drop is pronounced
- in all age groups except those 35 and over, who use drugs at
- a rate comparable to 1979 levels. Yet the number of hard-core
- abusers remains unchanged. And a smorgasbord of nouvelle intoxicants
- is being served up to a new generation of users.
- </p>
- <p> The frenetic '80s infatuation with stimulants has become the
- mellower '90s flirtation with depressants. Heroin, which has
- a calming effect, is gaining on crack, which produces high agitation.
- Some drug experts sense a sociological sea change. "It's really
- relevant that in the '80s the drug of choice was one that the
- second you did it, you wanted more," says Carlo McCormick, an
- editor at a culture and fashion monthly who was the host of
- LSD parties in New York City in the '80s. "At this point with
- the current crop of drugs, you're set for the night." Others
- have a wider perspective. "If you look historically at a large
- population that has been using a stimulant like cocaine," says
- James Nielsen, a 26-year veteran with the Drug Enforcement Administration,
- "they will then go on to a depressant like heroin."
- </p>
- <p> Ironically, the heroin surge also reflects a new health consciousness
- on the part of drug abusers. Youthful offenders, scared off
- by the devastation of crack, are dabbling in heroin instead,
- while chronic crack addicts are changing over to heroin because
- of its mellower high and cheaper cost. Among both groups, fear
- of HIV transmission has made snorting, rather than injection,
- the preferred method of ingestion. "The needle is out, man,"
- says Stephan ("Boobie") Gaston, 40, of East Harlem, a 26-year
- abuser. "All they're doing is sniffing." Even so, the risks
- remain high. Heroin-related incidents jumped from 10,300 during
- a three-month period in 1991 to 13,400 during a comparable period
- in 1992, according to a Federal Drug Abuse Warning Network survey
- of hospital emergency rooms. Heroin-treatment admissions have
- also increased over the past year.
- </p>
- <p> The turn toward heroin is coupled with a sharp recognition among
- youthful abusers of the dangers of crack. Anthony M., 13, who
- is detoxifying from a marijuana habit at the Daytop Village
- Bronx Outreach Center in New York City, estimates that 20 or
- so of his 200 classmates use heroin or other drugs, but among
- them, only one goes in for crack. "That kid wanted others to
- do it too," he says, "but the other kids were like, `Nah,' because
- some of the kids, their parents had died because of crack."
- </p>
- <p> Other hard-learned lessons seem not to affect young people today.
- LSD use among high school seniors reached its highest level
- last year since 1983, according to an annual study by the University
- of Michigan's Institute for Social Research. In the rave clubs
- of Los Angeles, $2 to $5 buys a teenager a 10-to-12-hour LSD
- high. "LSD may be a prime example of generational forgetting,"
- says Lloyd Johnston, principal investigator for the study. "Today's
- youngsters don't hear what an earlier generation heard--that
- LSD may cause bad trips, flashbacks, schizophrenia, brain damage,
- chromosomal damage and so on."
- </p>
- <p> Marijuana, usually the first illegal drug sampled by eventual
- hard-core abusers, is also back in vogue. Of the 11.4 million
- Americans who admitted to using drugs within a month of the
- 1992 Household Survey, 55% referred solely to pot; an additional
- 19% abused marijuana in combination with other drugs. "Cannabis
- is the drug that teaches our kids what other drugs are all about,"
- says Charlie Stowell, the DEA's cannabis coordinator in California.
- He says today's marijuana is considerably more potent and expensive
- than the pot of the '60s because the amount of THC--the ingredient
- that provides the high--has risen from 2% or 3% to 12%.
- </p>
- <p> The '90s has also ushered in some drug novelties. Since the
- turn of the dec ade, gamma hydroxy butyrate, known as GHB,
- has been used illegally in the body-building community to reduce
- fat. Recently, however, youths have begun to abuse the drug
- to achieve a trancelike state. In New York City kids concoct
- a "Max" cocktail by dissolving GHB in water, then mixing in
- amphetamines. A different mix resulted in several overdoses
- in the Atlanta area in the past few months. Manhattan's hard-core
- sex community has also turned on to "Special K," or Cat Valium,
- an anesthetic that numbs the body.
- </p>
- <p> The Administration appears to be pursuing several drug strategies
- simultaneously. The President has asked for a 7% rise in the
- budget for law enforcement as well as $13 billion for drug-control
- programs, an increase of $804 million over the current year.
- Last month Lee Brown, the Administration's drug czar, told a
- Senate subcommittee that the drug-control programs would now
- emphasize "demand-reduction programs" would now emphasize young
- people. Attorney General Janet Reno has also adopted a high
- profile on drugs, campaigning for a "national agenda for children"
- that would attack the root causes of drug abuse and violence.
- </p>
- <p> Meanwhile the daily challenge of containing the drug epidemic
- falls largely to local cops and DEA field offices. Ingenuity
- is the name of the game. In California, where 19% of the state's
- marijuana is grown indoors to evade detection, the DEA tracks
- purchases of illicit equipment, such as high-pressure sodium
- lights, to pick up the trail of growers. Minneapolis police
- have grown more sophisticated in tracking crack dealers who
- no longer keep cars, residences or bank accounts in their own
- names. "We've begun using financial records and become more
- knowledgeable in accounting and the flow of money," says Lieut.
- Bernie Bottema, supervisor of the city's narcotics unit. "We've
- had to rise to the level of our competition." It appears that
- level is not going to drop off anytime soon.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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