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STREET DRUG CRYSTAL METH ENDANGERING LIVES

There's a new drug on the block that's sweeping the country. It's so powerful that once used, it's got you for the rest of your life - which is approximately only 7 years. The drug is called crystal meth, shortened from its full chemical name which is methamphetamine. The trouble is that the drug is easy to concoct from over the counter cold ingredients and from products available from health stores designed for weight loss and as endurance boosters. It is estimated that more than 90% of people who try meth become addicted. Its effects can last up to 24 hours, and it enhances sexual libido. However, even small amounts of meth can also cause a spiked heart rate and blood pressure and can produce a roller coaster of emotions and effects, including euphoria, irritability, confusion, anxiety, paranoia and aggressiveness. Meth can lead to respiratory problems, irregular heartbeat, anorexia, brain damage and death. All drugs are a concern, but, this one causes exceptional concern because the mental disturbance from this drug is more permanent. A sure sign of a meth user is the so-called "meth mouth" which is rotten, twisted, blackened teeth which result from the use of this drug.

Unfortunately, meth is simple to cook, and makeshift labs hidden in communities have sprouted across much of rural Canada and the US, where the drug is sometimes referred to as "hillbilly crack". It is hitting hardest in rural communities, because rural youth have less access to mainstream street drugs. Heavy crystal meth use began in western Canada but it is now creeping east and has been found in all provinces outside the Atlantic provinces. Between 2001 and 2003, police seizures of the drug rose by 50% in BC, 20% in Alberta, 857% in Saskatchewan, 141% in Manitoba, 108% in Ontario and 467% in Quebec.

Because of the seriousness of this addiction, on June 10, 2005, the western premiers met in Regina to tackle the problem. They recommended that the federal government reclassify the drug under the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act, thereby changing its use from being a misdemeanour to becoming a felony and placing meth in the same class of drugs as cocaine and heroin. The Minister of Justice agreed to this reclassification which took place in August, 2005 and has resulted in an increase in the maximum penalty for producers and distributors of the drug, from 10 years to life imprisonment, and the maximum penalty for possession to 7 years from three years. This increased penalty was necessary in order to draw tougher sentences from reluctant judges who have discretion in sentencing, but have consistently given jails terms half or a third as long as those given for other drugs. According to the Conservative Justice critic, Vic Toews, the previous maximum of 10 years imprisonment was never handed down. He stated:

The real issue is if you want prison to be the punishment for methamphetamine … then you have to impose mandatory minimum sentences. We have to be looking at, at least two years.

The change in reclassification, as well as the tougher sentences met with the approval of the US which had complained at a recent UN International Narcotics Control Strategy meeting, that Canada was becoming a major source of methamphetamine as well as the chemicals used to make it, the same as Canada has become a major supplier of marijuana smuggled across the border to the US.

Not only is meth a danger to street involved youth, intravenous drug users and young adults in the club scene, it is also having a devastating effect on the homosexual community.

Crystal meth is now available everywhere in bathhouses. The drug sends individuals on an insatiable and obsessive quest for as much sex with as many people as possible, sometimes for days at a time, and almost always "bareback", that is, without the use of condoms. This leads to a greatly increased risk of HIV infection as well as a host of other sexually transmitted diseases. Crystal meth, which is called "Tina" in the homosexual community, apparently supercharges the sex drive and keeps users awake for around-the-clock partying. Unfortunately, meth not only boosts libido, but it also warps judgment, causing users to lose control and feel invulnerable, leading to more and more sex with a multitude of partners. There is also a huge trend on internet meeting spots for homosexuals to solicit sex called PNP (party and play), which is an acronym that translates into meaning "sex while doing crystal meth".

Needless to say, since meth is easier to produce than marijuana, it is becoming popular with organized crime groups, who are always happy to participate in any illegal activity that brings in hard cash. As if Canada didn't already have enough problems with illegal drug use.

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