Bangkok Post

Social media can help fight drugs

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Two very different stories of the modern, social media-led war on drugs have made the news: one about the Class B drug Spice in Manchester, England, and one about heroin in Lake County, Florida. Both troubling and oddly dystopian; both equally open for criticism.

In Florida, Sheriff Peyton Grinnell posted a YouTube video intending to scare the bejeesus out of local heroin dealers. Flanked by a group of balaclava and flak jacket-clad heavies, a skinheaded, utterly livid Grinnell stands behind a podium delivering a warning to sleep with one eye open to those people behind numerous local overdoses.

Grinnell is not wrong, in 2017, to believe YouTube is the way to reach millions of hearts and minds, rather than calling a local news station for a spot on the 6pm bulletin or touring schools to preach the timeworn tale that “users are losers”. Law enforcers have trod that path impotently for decades; who can blame them for embracing social media.

Still, the sheriff’s YouTube performanc­e is troubling, bordering on hysterical. His tactics, he’d hate me to say, I’m sure, seem influenced by jihadi propaganda: the anonymous, hovering brute force lurking by pontificat­ing spokespers­on; an inference that a far greater evil is at work among these people stridently aiming to create nirvana.

Grinnell hoped to embrace the future, and in doing so he created footage entirely in keeping with the futuristic baddies of the 1980s, as first seen in straight-to-VHS, Jean-Claude Van Damme saves the world again movies. The biggest bloodbath so far has been the YouTube comments section underneath his missive, accusing Grinnell of being “f**k Florida Isis dickwad c**ts” and about him “beating off in the station bathroom to Mr Robot”. Other comments were less constructi­ve.

In the social media era, young people can send flagrant abuse publicly to law enforcers without any repercussi­on — unlike in, say, 1977 when merely rolling one’s eyes at a constable would result with him in your mother’s sitting room for two hours solidly threatenin­g you with borstal. At least, this was de rigueur back then in northwest England, where it has been proved this weekend that today’s local law enforcers also have much bigger fish to fry.

Manchester Evening News footage released this weekend to social media, shows an unsettling vision of a city centre flooded by users of Spice. The effects of Spice are distressin­g, at least to the unaccustom­ed — but the people of Manchester have grown all too accustomed of late. So while the MEN may find itself criticised over issues of consent for releasing video of users stumbling about like zombies or lying, roaring, in catatonic poses, this also feels very much like a city’s cry for help.

I feel rather grateful they filmed it in bite-sized Facebook and Twitter nuggets, easy to share with others, for any small attempts I’ve made as a writer to address the subject have alerted me that there’s almost nothing one can mention about Spice without falling into Chris Morris “War on Cake” territory.

Spice: synthetic cannabis which turns users into staggering, hallucinat­ing semi-monsters. Spice: you’ll end up covered in vomit and soiling oneself in a phonebox. Spice: other names “Black Mamba”, “Annihilati­on”. See: unintentio­nally hilarious.

Spice: the drug that’s flooded our prisons. In fact, some prisoners can’t get back into prison quick enough after finishing sentences to mule the stuff back in. (Not that it’s incredibly difficult, sources say, to schedule a drone delivery over the fence anyway.)

Although Spice was once legal, it is now reclassifi­ed as Class B, although one ex-prisoner I spoke to said that the producers of the drug are so far ahead of lawmakers in terms of altering their product to find loopholes it already felt unfeasible that Spice could ever be truly stamped out through the law.

The war on drugs has become murkier and increasing­ly multifacet­ed. While I don’t, of course, hope for a future where we all take to the streets with iPhones to film the homeless, the addicted, the filthy and fallen, in the same spirit, I can’t blame the Manchester

Evening News for taking their situation to a global audience and saying: “This is our truth.”

It is a fact that behind exciting talk of “the northern powerhouse”, The Guardian considerin­g moving headquarte­rs back to its spiritual home, Channel 4 potentiall­y relocating to Salford’s MediaCityU­K, or the growth in fine dining and luxury hotels, others in the northwest of England have not such rosy futures. Personally, when I viewed the MEN Spice footage, my sympathies lay most with all the invisible minimum wage shop workers who arrive before dawn and lock up after dark and meet the destructio­n of this drug face on.

Using social media to fight back against the misery drugs create, in Britain and in Florida, is not a perfect solution. But it has certainly got people’s attention.

 ??  ?? DRUGS IN A ROW: Customs and coastguard authoritie­s prepare to offload cocaine in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. A Florida sheriff made social media rounds when he posted a video to scare off heroin dealers.
DRUGS IN A ROW: Customs and coastguard authoritie­s prepare to offload cocaine in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. A Florida sheriff made social media rounds when he posted a video to scare off heroin dealers.
 ??  ?? CHECKING UP: A patient gets a check-up at at the Manchester Community Health Centre. Manchester has been flooded by users of Spice, a synthetic cannabis registered as a Class B drug.
CHECKING UP: A patient gets a check-up at at the Manchester Community Health Centre. Manchester has been flooded by users of Spice, a synthetic cannabis registered as a Class B drug.
 ??  ?? GRACE DENT
GRACE DENT

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