2010-10-25 21:13:33 UTC
Isn't this policy counterproductive to a large degree? Considering the reasoning behind these bans hinges on the argument of protecting "public health".... Wouldn't it be simpler and cheaper to just treat junkies? Then educate the public on the real effects of hard drug use?
http://content.usatoday.com/communities/ondeadline/post/2010/10/alcoholic-energy-drink-not-drugs-sickened-9-wash-state-students/1
A 23.5-ounce can of Four Loko, a fruity, caffeinated malt liquor, has an alcohol content of 12%, equivalent to drinking four to six beers. The caffeine can also suppress the effects of alcohol, which can make someone drink more than usual.
Washington state's attorney general immediately called for the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to ban the drinks. A proposed state ban died earlier this year in the Legislature.
http://kosu.org/2010/02/bill-would-ban-synthetic-marijuana/
Local law enforcement officials and Oklahoma’s Bureau of Narcotics are constantly fighting new drugs. From meth to prescription pills, it’s an uphill battle to keep these substances off the streets. Now state officials are bracing for another drug called “spice” or “K2” – a synthetic form of marijuana popular in Oklahoma’s neighbor to the north.
K2 is the Kansas brand of manufactured marijuana. Kansas police officers first learned of the synthetic form of pot this past fall. It’s legally sold as incense and undetectable on a basic drug test. Marketed as “spice” in Europe, it produces the same high as regular marijuana, and now it’s spreading in the states. Jeremy Morris is a forensic scientist at the Johnson County crime lab in Mission, Kansas.