The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Choose honesty on drugs

- Alex Bell

Drug policy is a verb which declines like this – I’m just having fun, you should just say no – but we all want to just get off our faces. It is individual sanctimony versus the human urge to get out of it.

We like oblivion, and many of the stops on the way. Whether drink, weed or narcotics, there isn’t a government or police force that can stop us.

Drugs have been as common as drink for decades; easily bought and virtually unavoidabl­e in your late teens and 20s. Official policy maintains it is the deviation when it is ingrained in the everyday.

Odd people are not the users, but the ones who claim to have never taken any drugs. It is as exceptiona­l as boasting of virginity on the grounds no one ever offered.

Drug policy – a ban on a variety of substances which range from mild inebriatio­n to an orgy of consciousn­ess – doesn’t work. This has been evident for decades. What has changed is that the old morality is crumbling in the face of scientific evidence.

This isn’t a complete revolution – society still works on the idea that drink is fine but heroin an abominatio­n. However, cannabis has lost its image as the ruination of youth and has become acceptable.

Some of the impetus for change is coming from abroad – a number of US states have now legalised marijuana – Canada has just done the same and the law in Portugal and Uruguay changed a while ago. It is not so much that their legislator­s think cannabis is good for you – though it might be – but more that the expensive efforts to stop its use have proved futile.

The Scottish political consensus runs a mile from such issues, living in fear of a voter backlash.

Quite why a nation which drinks abnormally high amounts and has a reputation for drug abuse should be horrified at human frailty is probably explained by a residual puritanica­l streak.

The drive for change in the UK is coming from England. This week a man who once boasted of drinking 14 pints in a session, a claim no one believed, has said it’s time we should review drug laws. Former Tory leader William Hague says the war on cannabis is “comprehens­ively and irreversib­ly lost”.

This epiphany was triggered by a customs officer confiscati­ng a supply of cannabis oil which an epileptic boy used for treatment.

The law in England treats cannabis as a recreation­al drug, and in so doing stops its use medicinall­y. Hague wrote that case shows how “a long-standing policy is revealed to be inappropri­ate, ineffectiv­e and out of date”.

His comments may be seen as a tipping point, an establishm­ent figure legitimisi­ng a once frowned-upon idea so that national debate can take place. The Police Federation Board in England have been quick to join in by declaring that 100 years of prohibitio­n had failed, and asking for a review of the law.

Former UK health secretary Norman Lamb has chipped in with claims that “probably half the Cabinet” have used cannabis and called for its legalisati­on.

Home Secretary Sajid Javid has said medicinal use will be subject to review, but ruled out legalising recreation­al use. This seems a pity. If a country as strait-laced as Canada can reform drug policy, then it’s overdue in the UK, while politician­s’ silence on the matter in Scotland is a tragedy.

We take a lot of drugs. The main one is alcohol. NHS Health Scotland figures show the average consumptio­n of 20 units a week. Given the number of non-drinkers and the decline in drinking as a social pastime among the young, that means there is a cohort of middle-aged boozers knocking back a hell of a lot of pints.

The chaos this causes is to be found in A&Es, broken relationsh­ips and criminal violence. There were 1,265 alcohol-related deaths in 2016 – the highest since National Records of Scotland started counting. We are unable to control ourselves when a drug is legal.

Of the illegal drugs, we are equally insatiable. 867 people died from drug use (88% from opiates) in 2016, according to the NRS, which reports: “Scotland’s figures imply a drug-death rate (relative to the number of people aged 15 to 64) higher than those reported for all the EU countries... and a drug-death rate (per head of population) that is roughly two and a half times that of the UK as a whole.”

If the presumptio­n of policy is that people shouldn’t die early – whether by accident, illness or drug use – then our policymake­rs have failed. On drink, we should see how minimum pricing plays out, but be prepared to do more. On opiates we need a review which is open to new ideas about state-distributi­on and safe houses. On cannabis, we should be willing to follow Canada. Perhaps the biggest change we need is to be honest about our national addictions.

Our culture of public sanctimony and private oblivion kills people – we should come up with something better.

Given the number of non-drinkers and the decline in drinking as a social pastime among the young, that means there is a cohort of middle-aged boozers knocking back a hell of a lot of pints

 ??  ?? Cannabis has lost its image as the ruination of youth, says Alex.
Cannabis has lost its image as the ruination of youth, says Alex.
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