tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8626140607960910795.post4574893835110049806..comments2024-02-16T04:13:24.822-05:00Comments on The Tireless Agorist: Whitney Houston - Drug War VictimAgorist Donhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06881858776546654763noreply@blogger.comBlogger4125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8626140607960910795.post-42538019440364539122012-02-12T20:11:07.022-05:002012-02-12T20:11:07.022-05:00This is yet another post I fully expected to see m...This is yet another post I fully expected to see many bloggers and others make. A celebrity has died, apparently of drug use (news reports are currently stating Whitney's cause of death is unknown, though with history of drug use, it's reasonable to suspect her death to be drug related), and it's being used to promote the idea of "This Horrible, Terrible Disease of Addiction."<br /><br />The origins of the popularization of alcoholism as a disease are easy to trace, but the actual evidence used is sketchy at best. It is largely through the efforts of one person, Marty Mann, famous for being the first woman to "achieve permanent sobriety" through Alcoholics Anonymous. You can find some whitewashed history of her on (for example) the website of the National Council on Alcoholism and Drug Dependence (the renamed National Council on Alcoholism which she founded and ran for so many years), but unbiased history is rarely found within the "recovery community." Here's the story:<br /><a href="http://pointsadhsblog.wordpress.com/2011/12/16/mrs-marty-mann-and-the-medicalization-of-alcoholism/" rel="nofollow">http://pointsadhsblog.wordpress.com/2011/12/16/mrs-marty-mann-and-the-medicalization-of-alcoholism/</a><br />Here's a short pictorial history of Marty Mann:<br /><a href="http://www.peele.net/lib/nca.html" rel="nofollow">http://www.peele.net/lib/nca.html</a><br />The idea of drug addiction also being a disease rides on the tails of alcoholism as a disease. Indeed, treatment centers treat them as a single disease, and tell patients that to have either alcoholism or drug addiction is to also have the other, regardless of the patient's actual experience.<br /><br />Certainly the use of mind-altering substances can become a habitual and very harmful activity, and making most such substances illegal only increases the danger, but to call drug abuse a "disease" is to buy into the current system, as demonstrated not just by interventions but more often by DUI courts and the proliferation of "drug courts." Alcohol and drug related offenders are offered alcoholism and drug treatment in exchange for reduced sentencing (full sentencing is often loss of license for DUI and prison time for drugs), and if tested positive for drugs OR if a treatment center counselor reports one isn't complying with the "suggestions" of treatment during a 'probation' period, the offender will THEN receive the full sentencing.<br /><br />This all sounds good, and all the people involved in this system believe they are doing the right thing - those found driving drunk or using drugs get the "treatment they need." Unfortunately, 95 percent of all alcohol and drug treatment in the USA (and virtually 100 percent of government forced treatment) involves 12 step programs such as Alcoholics Anonymous and Narcotics Anonymous. These are essentially faith healing religious programs in spite of them calling themselves "spiritual, not religious." If you don't believe me, google Twelve Steps and see what results you get. Actually read through all 12 steps (they're short, about a sentence each). Ask anyone who has been to "treatment" or is "in recovery" what it's about, whether it's 12-step. Push them (they're generally reluctant to talk about it with people outside "the program"), ask them EXACTLY what the 12 steps say.<br /><br />I suppose it would be "sort-of okay" that alcohol and drug treatment is religious, IF it worked. The real tragedy is the vast majority of people who go to treatment fail to be abstinent from alcohol and drugs (or "sober") and go back to their previous ways, but this is ALWAYS blamed on "the disease." No one involved in this system EVER questions whether current treatment is ANYTHING other than the best available.benbradleyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11913177302145223457noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8626140607960910795.post-61475941201784856772012-02-12T13:55:02.802-05:002012-02-12T13:55:02.802-05:00I don't know. Whitney had other problems, coll...I don't know. Whitney had other problems, collectively going by the name "Bobbie Brown." I think--and I could be wrong--that Brown used drugs to control her. It could have just as easily been alcohol or prescription pain killers. The illegality of some drugs is inconsequential, I think.robeiaehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17145457789511566198noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8626140607960910795.post-4482609821255303682012-02-12T11:07:33.377-05:002012-02-12T11:07:33.377-05:00Good luck in changing the mindset. In these days o...Good luck in changing the mindset. In these days of hyper-hysteria over money, there are those who want to give drug tests to people who apply for assistance. In the name of saving a few dollars, there are those in our culture who are willing -- nay, eager -- to demonize people for their addictions.David Goodloehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01436578436386818281noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8626140607960910795.post-87473922451151686422012-02-12T10:46:38.728-05:002012-02-12T10:46:38.728-05:00I'm reading a lot of this same sentiment acros...I'm reading a lot of this same sentiment across the web this morning. Michael Jackson, Amy Winehouse and many other wonderful musicians, actors, friends, neighbors and family members may still be alive today if not for our society's failing "War on Drugs"Judiehttp://www.searchamelia.comnoreply@blogger.com