Thursday, April 16, 2015

The Newest Designer Drug Takes it's First American Life

You may not have heard of it yet, but like many designer drugs this one causes erratic behavior and often death.
A new designer drug has hit the streets of South Florida, killing a young man last week. Known as “gravel” or, more commonly, Flakka, alpha-PVP has been on the DEA radar for over a year. Many of these designer drugs, known as “bath salts” and entering the market from other countries, mainly Eastern countries, have had an effect on populations elsewhere giving the US a warning of things to come.
“Cathinone” is the scientific name for the family of synthetic drugs that have burst onto the scene lately, being marketed as plant food, detergent incense and, thus the name, bath salt. These drugs only became popular recently, but have been around since the 1920’s. There is little known about the immediate effects of this and other designer drugs and nothing known about the long-term effects. That is what makes this class of drug so scary. We have seen how out of control, an individual can be who is under the influence of bath salts, when not long ago a man using a similar drug stripped down and assaulted homeless Ronald Pappo before the police shot him to death.



The new drug is molecularly similar to antidepressants known NRI’s (Norepinephrine Re-Uptake inhibitors but have a much different effect on human beings. This is a very dangerous and hard to contain drug. It’s dangerous for above mentioned and obvious reasons. It is hard to contain because it is cheap and if demand rises will flood through customs in packages and delivered to a buyer’s doorstep. One of the contributing factors of the popularity of these drugs is that it is not tested by conventional drug tests, making it an alluring alternative to more established drugs for the millions of American’s who have to take drug tests for probation or work.
It’s cheap, plentiful, novel and undetectable by common tests. Bath salts are no longer sold in head shops and gas stations, but have been substituted for more costly drugs by street dealers. It’s hard to say if this is fad drug or here to stay. Many young adults in Florida are buying a bath salt drug that’s active ingredient, MDPV, reportedly gives a similar high to Ecstasy. It is marketed by dealers as “Molly” (short for Molecular MDMA) and MDMA is Ecstasy in its purest form. However, what costs the street dealers less than $100 per kilogram, can cost the unknowing end user the same price for a single gram.
There are hundreds of these designer drug compounds and law enforcement still isn’t the answer. Until real education about drugs is introduced, young people will not have the tools to properly weigh the pros and cons of experimenting with drugs like these. The DARE program is a failure. It would be great if we could rely on parents to educate their own children regarding the dangers of addictive drugs, like Flakka, it’s never going to be a reality.
So what is the answer? Trial and error, perhaps, with a faster measurement dynamic of current program success. We cannot allow a program like DARE to be implemented by the same entity that gets the majority of it’s funding from the thing it is trying to prevent. The CDC and State Health Departments should have an escalating role in the prevention of drug abuse in young people. In fact, these agencies are more relevant to drug abuse than any other and must eventually be tasked with the jurisdiction over the areas or drug abuse and mental health. The old way is not working. Quite the opposite.
Law enforcement’s long-time jurisdiction over drugs and abuse has been a huge failure and led to a conflict of interest for our Departments of Law Enforcement. More so, growing up in a society that has always attempted to control drug abuse in this manner, it can be difficult to imagine a better way. This mishandling of our attempt to curb drug abuse has led to daily, tragic miscarriages of justices. Drugs being the most prevalent legal offense has shifted our attention concerning true criminal behavior and actions and resulted in massive amounts of money for the agencies that nibble at the problem.
Drugs, like Flakka, flow through our borders, and now through our postal services from other countries. Police make a valiant effort at fighting the drug trade, but as time has proven, are just inadequate. Law enforcement can’t stop something that is in such high demand by the people. Something must be done to minimize the demand. If our schools could effectively drill into our young students the absurdity and insanity of addictive drug use the way they drill in the multiplications tables, we would see a drop in demand and the cartels and pharmaceutical companies would have to find new jobs because neither is going to cater to the < 1 million Americans that want drugs, if our programs were successful. But, do we really want that?
After all it’s not just cartels and big pharma that makes money on the drug trade.

Flakka isn't news. It is one of hundreds of drugs just from its family of designer drugs. It wasn’t the first and won’t be the last drug to make it into America. Until we pull back our own veils and see the failure that this “War on Drugs” has become, will we be disturbed enough to make a change and stop the problem at it’s source: the demand.

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