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Dec-11-2007 11:04TweetFollow @OregonNews Survey Reveals Teen Drug Use has RisenSalem-News.comTeen drug use is much Higher than 15 years ago; teens are badly misinformed about dangers.
(WASHINGTON, D.C.) - The latest "Monitoring the Future" survey of teen drug use, released today, reveals disturbing trends in teen drug use and attitudes, officials of the Marijuana Policy Project said. "This new survey documents the complete, utter failure of current government policies on marijuana," said Aaron Houston, director of government relations for the Marijuana Policy Project in Washington, D.C. The new survey shows that rates of teen use of most drugs, including marijuana, remain far higher than 15 years ago. For example, in 1992, 3.7 percent of eighth graders were current marijuana users, compared to 5.7 percent in 2007. For twelfth graders, the figures were 11.9 percent and 18.8 percent, respectively. Use of cocaine and hallucinogens has also risen sharply in the last 15 years. Current cocaine use was up in all age groups, with the rate among tenth graders nearly doubling from 0.7 percent in 1992 to 1.3 percent in 2007. Perhaps most disturbing, Houston noted, are misunderstandings regarding the dangers of drugs shown in this survey, particularly among the youngest teens surveyed. For example, 50.2 percent of eighth graders saw "great risk" in smoking marijuana occasionally -- more than saw great risk in trying crack or powder cocaine, trying LSD, or in drinking nearly every day. Twelfth graders were more likely to disapprove of occasional marijuana use than of binge drinking (having five or more drinks at one sitting) once or twice every weekend. Story continues below "Drug Czar John Walters touts minor, short-term improvements, but deliberately ignores the big picture," Houston said. "Over the long haul, teen drug use is up, not down. As a parent, I don't want any kids smoking marijuana. It's truly scary that the White House has convinced millions of teens that drugs that can literally kill them are safer than marijuana. We're pursuing policies whose costs will be paid in lives." Source: the Marijuana Policy Project Articles for December 10, 2007 | Articles for December 11, 2007 | Articles for December 12, 2007 | Quick Links
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Austin December 12, 2007 12:00 pm (Pacific time)
DARE? Oh that's right, that was the program that had cops take their guns into my grade school class rooms and talk about addicts like they were all dirty people living in gutters. Boy did that clear up my confusion. Thanks, Officer Plaskett.
Neal Feldman December 11, 2007 11:44 pm (Pacific time)
DARE is a waste of time and money about as useful as the old Duck and Cover cartoons were at protecting one from a nuke strike. Studies have shown no long term differences between those who did the DARE thing as kids and those who did not. Yet further evidence of prohibition being nothing but a grotesquely failed policy. Ah well...
Janet December 11, 2007 10:50 pm (Pacific time)
The answer is that the government needs those funds. Do you really believe that all those funds went into D.A.R.E. programs? Clearly they did not.
Curmudgeon December 11, 2007 12:27 pm (Pacific time)
So much for the highly touted D.A.R.E. program. When are we going to quit dumping hundreds of millions of dollars into a feel-good program that has been such an obvious and dismal failure for so many years?
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