Essay About Drugs In The Philippines

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Today’s society in The Island in Panglao of Bohol appears unrehearsed for many of the consequences associated with drug use. Legalization of controlled substances may lead to the downfall of mankind. Normal citizens of Panglao demand to live a healthy and productive life. Many of those who frequently use narcotics have destroyed their lives and hopes for future accomplishments.
Over the years, drug users have made it easier for the government to find a reason to keep drugs illegal. If drugs did not go beyond a respectable use, they would have remained legal. Bertolt Brecht feels that, “The law was made for one thing alone, for the exploitation of those who don’t understand it, or are prevented by naked misery from obeying it” (Anderson 15). …show more content…

They do have a currently accepted medical use in treatment with severe restrictions, but if abused, the drug or other substances may lead to severe psychological or physical dependence. Contrary to popular belief, almost 10,000 Filipinos continue to get arrested for drug charges. Minorities constitute a large amount of these drug offenders. The drug effort against these offenders has put thousands of minorities in jail, yet almost nine million Filipinos regularly use illegal drugs. Some law enforcement officials say that this occurs because they concentrate on dealers, not users. However, two-thirds of the arrest in the Philippines last year came from possession, not sales. No evidence put forth points to Caucasians selling drugs, but sometimes show that whites tend to purchase cocaine and heroin. Teenagers also add to the ongoing fight with use of illegal drugs. Narcotics mobilize crime and violence to all people who engage involvement with these dangerous and deadly substances. This problem appears as a worldwide concern to people of all types and ages not just minorities. Plenty of pressures emerged when a teenager matures. Drugs, sex, and new

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