Lethbridge Herald

Drug problem goes beyond race, social class

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Alcohol and drug abuse is neither recent nor is the monopoly of a particular class or race. Opium use, for example, was quite common in high society in Victorian England: Browning, Byron, Dickens, Keats all took opium.

My grandfathe­r was a horse veterinari­an in the Russia-Japan War of the 1900s. When he came back he was a heroin addict. Probably he had PTSD in today’s terms, exacerbate­d by easy access to the drug. He failed in everything he tried in civilian life, and remained a proud but bitter man.

At the SACPA meeting on April 19, Sabrina Hacker confirmed something I had long suspected. She said, “The problem of Fetal Alcoholic Spectrum Disorder (FASD) is much greater than previously thought.” It is not limited to one racial group or a class. When I volunteere­d in a program for handicappe­d children, I met children with FASD from white middle-class families. However, its omnipresen­ce has been hidden from the public.

The speaker informed us that the tragic consequenc­e of parents’ foolhardin­ess was ubiquitous. They are called in different names like “attention deficit disorder” or something similar. In Alberta, she said, 40 per cent of pregnancie­s are reportedly unplanned, and among them as many as 11 per cent may have FASD. Two major risk groups are postsecond­ary students enjoying newly found freedom, and those who live in farming communitie­s who go out after hard day’s work where alcohol is often the only entertainm­ent. (Herald, April 20, page A4)

Furthermor­e, racism lets us ignore the problem, and makes us delusional: “Not our problem.” The whole society is in denial consequent­ly exposing all of us to risk. If we need to eradicate a tragedy like FASD, we must get out of the misconcept­ion based on racial stereotype and own the problem as our own and educate ourselves. The First Nations acknowledg­e the problem and are speaking out.

Harm from substance abuse had been around but was ignored. It was only when it became apparent among working-class and Chinese immigrants, affecting productivi­ty and social order, it became illegal. Still, the betteroff class gets away free. Attempts to hide the problem as something found only among a certain race or class, and by criminaliz­ing it, expose the general public to danger, such as today’s opioid crisis. We should treat it as a public health issue without stigma attached, like we do with alcohol and tobacco use. Classism and Racism harm all of us. Tadashi (Tad) Mitsui

Lethbridge

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