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$html_title = "Ecstasy Moves To The Midwest";
$description = "Ecstasy Moves To The Midwest";
$keywords = "";
$body = <<Ecstasy Moves to the
Midwest
Over the past several years, and
more recently the past several months, there have been
tragedies in our country that have sparked fear and vengeance
in the hearts of Americans: Terrorism. From the Oklahoma City
Federal Building bombing, to the bombing of the Olympics in
Atlanta. From the World Trade Center collapse, to the Anthrax
contaminations. Though the death and destruction reached
unfathomably new heights and received the majority of
attention, there is another “war” that still
claims more lives than all of the incidents mentioned above
combined, that is the fight against drugs.
Substance abuse is without
question a national epidemic. The drugs that are used have
varied throughout regions and time periods. In the past few
years there has been a nationwide surge in the use of MDMA,
also known as ecstasy. Though at first “e”, as it
is sometimes referred to, was a party drug in larger
metropolitan areas, the drug has seeped its way into the
rural Midwest towns of America and its pervasive harmful
effects are now prevalent everywhere. Evidence of this has
prompted stories in the media in cities such as Tulsa on the
growing ecstasy problem. One of the biggest problems with
this so-called club drug is that the youth of today
don’t perceive the substance to be dangerous,
regardless of the endless pages of scientific data clearly
stating the damage that is done by ingesting this chemical
compound.
MDMA
(3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine) is a very potent drug
that combines amphetamine and a mild hallucinogen. Like many
illicit drugs, ecstasy was developed and patented by a
pharmaceutical company, but like so many other controlled
substances was found to be extremely toxic and hazardous.
Drug rehabilitation expert L. Ron Hubbard discovered that
toxic substances, such as ecstasy, get lodged in the fatty
tissue of a person’s body and remain there for years
after use ceases. The old drug residues can trigger cravings
or a person’s desire for more drugs at any time the
person’s heart rate increases and burns fatty tissue
for energy, releasing the drug particles back into the blood
stream. Some of the physical effects of the drug include
increased heart rate, dangerously high body temperature,
dehydration and involuntary jaw clenching. The number of
emergency room incidents involving ecstasy has skyrocketed
over the last couple of years. The most devastating effect of
ecstasy is what it does to a person’s
mind.
A person’s memory consists
of pictures, or recordings, of everything that has happened
in the past and included in the memory are sight, sound,
smell, taste, touch and also the emotion. Ecstasy, through
its psychoactive component, scrambles and alters these
pictures and emotions. This makes it very difficult for the
user to have any sense of reality. Ecstasy also damages a
person’s natural ability to feel good, so extreme
depression follows the “high” and leaves the
person to feel the long-term effects of the drug, which
creates a feeling of wanting that high again to replace the
depression. The cycle continues, taking more of the same drug
to escape the condition brought on by that drug, all the
while causing more damage mentally and physically. One former
ecstasy user summed up the drug’s effects oh him
saying, “I felt so much emotional pain and was so
depressed that I wanted to end my life and take all of the
world’s pain with me.”
Perhaps the most appealing aspect
of the drug for youth is the initial feeling of euphoria, but
the way it’s packaged and ingested makes it seem easier
to take. The idea of just taking a pill with a design stamped
on it makes it more attractive and appear less harmful.
Additionally, popping a pill is more socially acceptable than
snorting, smoking or injecting a drug. There are pro-rave
groups that promote the “purity” of the drug,
trying to push off the casualties and depression as misuse or
impure pills, feeding more lies to the millions of users by
saying its okay to take the drug. When it comes to ecstasy or
any other type of drug, the truth behind the advocates is
they are the ones that benefit most financially by people
becoming addicted. For example, there has been a
multi-billion dollar increase in prescription drug
manufacturing, promotion and users.
Next
Story©2003 Narconon of
Oklahoma, Inc. All Rights Reserved. NARCONON is a registered
trademark and service mark owned by Association for Better
Living and Education International and is used with its
permission.
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