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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 10 page report discusses the illegal drug trends that have taken place in the United States over the past two decades. Drugs have made a tremendous impact on American society over the past thirty to forty years, yet many Americans are often ambivalent regarding their opinions relating to drugs in terms of decriminalization, availability, impact on society, and mental and physical health impacts. In 1979, some 25 million Americans had tried drugs sometime in the preceding month. Today that figure is 11 million. Bibliography lists 12 sources.
Page Count:
10 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_BWdrgUS.doc
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
1 percent of those who try cocaine become daily users, and 74 percent of regular cocaine users use it less than once a month. Looked at in the context of
these facts instead of the hysteria promoted by the defenders of the status quo, it is not surprising that three different studies have shown only 2 to 4 percent of
respondents would try now-illegal drugs if they were legalized. According to Eldredge (1998) in his discussions of the legalization of certain drugs, the small percentage of drug users who
lapse into abuse hardly suggests that legalization will trigger a mass movement into drug abuse. The most simplistic of truths is the fact that legalization re-asserts the truth that each
person is responsible for his or her own behavior. For those Americans who believe that their world is untouched by either drugs or drug users, such a laissez faire attitude
presents a relatively logical argument. However, the fact remains that drugs have made a tremendous impact on American society over the past thirty to forty years, yet many Americans
are often ambivalent regarding their opinions relating to drugs in terms of decriminalization, availability, impact on society, and mental and physical health impacts. Whether or not such ambivalence is
related to the greater permissiveness of American society (after all, even President Clinton has been at least been handed a "joint," what he did with it is open to debate).
That was Then, This is Now According to Zuckerman (1997) in 1979, some 25 million Americans had tried drugs sometime in the preceding month. Today that figure is 11 million.
The reduction is due primarily to stricter drug laws, stronger societal disapproval, and an increased awareness of the devastation drugs can produce. Nonetheless, the United States is still and
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