Drug Use essay topics

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  • Known Drug In Use
    1,525 words
    "The overwhelming majority of athletes I know would do anything, and take anything, short of killing themselves to improve athletic performance" (Donohoe, Johnson 1). This statement is made by a once Olympic hammer-throw champion in 1973. It hardly portrays the importance that substance abuse has with regard to athletes and sports. If you are one of the many athletes in the United States, you have no doubt in your mind that this is an ongoing problem in the wide world of sports. If you live brea...
  • High Prices Cause Drug Addicts
    2,878 words
    REFORM DRUG LAWS This paper will prove that Americas drug laws are ineffective and cause more harm than good. The notion that a state of freedom exists in America is completely voided by narcotic laws. Narcotic laws cause a black market, which raises the prices of drugs to astronomical levels. These high prices cause drug addicts to turn to crime in order to support their habit. There exists substantial evidence that marijuana is less harmful than legal product like alcohol or nicotine. The war ...
  • Random Drug Test
    1,568 words
    Random Drug Testing: Waste of Time Her grades fell. She was always tired. She never seemed to be able to focus at school. Classes she used to be interested in became utterly mundane. Friends she used to care about became replaceable. She stopped spending time with her family. She sat on the bench at every soccer game instead of becoming the star player her coaches thought she could. This is what addiction to drugs can do to a young person's life. Addiction can take away everything that once made...
  • Positive And Negative Drug Herb Interactions
    777 words
    Interactions between dietary supplements and drugs will become a more serious concern as supplement makers adopt better manufacturing practices. Some of these interactions are positive to the patients health, while others are not. Mary Hardy, M.D., is a member of the Integrative Medicine Department of Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles. According to Dr. Hardy, Once these substances are properly labeled, properly documented, and properly used by consumers, we can expect that their most se...
  • Toxic Drug
    457 words
    Acetaminophen In the late 1800's it was discovered that papa-amino-phenol, could reduce fever, but the drug was too toxic to use. A less toxic extract called phenacetin was later found to be just as effective but also had pain-relieving properties. In 1949, it was learned that phenacetin was metabolized into an active but also less toxic drug, acetaminophen. Since then, acetaminophen has been sold under many over the counter brand names, most popular being Tylenol. Acetaminophen serves one basic...
  • Cocaine Use Prior To The Infant's Birth
    1,556 words
    The Effects of Prenatal Cocaine-Exposure On Cognitive Development There are many factors that are integrated into the successful development of a child from Prenatal growth into toddler hood. Teratogens (outside factors) have a great impact on the babies' in utero development. Some outside factors like second-hand smoke, smog, or fumes from cleaning chemicals can cause negative effects on the child inside the womb. A few major affects from teratogens could result in low birth weight, head circum...
  • Responsible For The Drug's Hallucinogenic Sensations
    962 words
    Hallucinogen While many drugs speed up or depress the central nervous system, there is a class of drugs that distorts how we feel, hear, see, smell, taste, and think. Called hallucinogens because users often hallucinate, or experience nonexistent sensations, these drugs are also known as psychedelic, or mind-bending, drugs. Some hallucinogens come from natural sources; others are made in laboratories. Examples of natural hallucinogens are mescaline, psilocybin, DMT, and marijuana. Mescaline, whi...
  • Current U.S. Policy On Drugs
    916 words
    The U.S. Foreign Policy on Counter-Narcotics One of the biggest problems in the United States today is the widespread use of narcotics. Currently, the United States has a very stern policy regarding the use, distribution, and trafficking of drugs. However, it is clear that the current U.S. policy is failing, and the supply of illegal drugs as well as the demand is increasing. The U.S. government has focused for years on dealing with the demand aspect of this issue. Through government programs di...
  • Alcohol And Other Drugs
    2,874 words
    One of the biggest problems people cope with today is the addiction of drugs and alcohol. The effects of taking these drugs are dangerous: domestic violence, crimes, accidents, sexual assault or becoming infected with HIV / AIDS. Different studies of domestic violence show a big involvement of high quantities of alcohol and other drugs. These increase the level of aggression. Alcoholism and child abuse, including incest, seem tightly intertwined as well. Parents, being under alcohol influence, a...
  • Gateway Between Marijuana And Hard Drugs
    1,214 words
    Kelsey Liles Pat Patterson Engl. 1301.0816 March 2002 American Drug Abuse Our society has found itself directly in the middle of a transcontinental drug surge. An estimated 23 million of the world's population regularly take illicit drugs, and the Drug Enforcement Administration estimated that 13.6 million of those who habitually used illegal drugs in 1998 were Americans. Even in our current everyday motions of life and productivity, we have set the path for self-destruction. "We awake to the ki...
  • Ecstasy The Drug
    794 words
    Today in the year 2000 there are many definitions of the word ecstasy. Deriving from the middle english word, , it has gone from being a state of overwhelming emotion to one of the most popular drugs in the 'club world " today. When I ask my parents what they think when they hear the word ecstasy they say,' You, your sister, and brother in Disney World. ' Well times have definitely changed. I asked about fifteen people in my dorm what they think when they hear the word and all of them said the s...
  • Physical Effects Of The Drug
    1,132 words
    ECSTASY Finally, one single dose of a simple small pill to end all of your worries and make you happy as if all were right in the world. This is the common perception most get when they are under the hypnotic trance of what is called Exstacy. Exstacy is a pill, a drug, above any other of its kind, specially formulated to encourage the user psychologically, everything is good, and love is in the air, no worries, no sorrow, that everything is perfect because the feeling is perfect. Physically, how...
  • Illegal Drugs
    658 words
    Hello, class. My name is Scott Gulas and today I will be debating in support of the opinion that "Illegal drugs should remain illegal". I feel that this point of view benefits the entire population of the United States of America. Do you want a beer; how bout a joint I bet this pill will cheer you up sound familiar It's as if these phrases are present in our daily conversations from teenage years throughout our existence. Drugs affect the lives of everyone in the United States today. A recent st...
  • Religious Peyote Use
    699 words
    Drug use for religious purposes Jamie Gipson Some of my ancestors are Native American so choose the book: The Peyote Cult La Barre, Weston. (1969). New York: Schock en Books. This book is a study of the background of the Mexican and American Indian rituals based on the plant that produces profound, but temporary sensory and psychic derangements. Peyote is a spineless cactus (Lophophore williams ii), ingested by people in Mexico and the United States to produce visions. The plant is a light blue-...
  • Dangerous And Many Deaths
    620 words
    The Monsters of America In the epic Beowulf, many monsters existed that threatened a society way of life. This theme can directly be related to us because of the many troubles facing our communities today. We face these troubles everyday; sometimes in our churches and schools, and as a society we have learned of many different dangers that threaten our lives today. We face many troubles in todays society, and many monsters exist that threaten our communities and ways of life such as weapons, alc...
  • Common Physical Effects The Drug
    837 words
    Did you know that nearly 5 percent of 10th and 12th graders and about 2 percent of 8th graders have reported to have used MDMA in the past year Isn t that scary to hear A study given to students at Stanford University showed that 40% of the students have used MDMA. These facts are astonishing. Many people don t realize what high levels this popular drug is being used in. MDMA is also known as Ecstasy, E, X, XTC, and many other street terms as well. MDMA is a semi-synthetic chemical compound. It ...
  • Native Americans Use Peyote
    1,166 words
    Should Native American tribes be allowed to use peyote as part of their religious practices? Peyote is one type of cactus grown in southwestern U.S. and in neighboring parts of Mexico. The active ingredient in peyote is mescaline, a somewhat potent hallucinogenic chemical. It has the capability of being a psychoactive drug causing the user to change what he / she sees, thinks, and feels. Down through the centuries, it has been used as a painkiller, a stimulant, and a spiritual tool in religious ...
  • Use Of Military Force Against The Cartels
    564 words
    The Technological Secrets of Cocaine Inc. discusses the recent advances in the Colombian drug cartels advanced billion dollar IT infrastructure. During the late 90's drug cartels began to spend billions of dollars on communications, online transactions, radar systems, advanced networks on information gathering, radar monitoring, and new weapons. This network now allows the cartels to smuggle more cocaine into the US then was possible before. In this article Kaihla touches on many topics discusse...
  • Effectiveness Of The War On Drugs
    1,024 words
    Incarceration rates in the United States are rising at dangerous levels causing great concern for the future of corrections. Legislators are being provoked by negligent public opinion to adopt a "get tough" attitude on all types of crime, despite the fact it has been proven incarceration rate and crime rate are not inversely proportional. Criminologists have looked toward technological advances in surveillance and modern correctional facilities to combat overcrowded prisons. However, the solutio...
  • Current Drug Prohibition
    2,117 words
    The debate over drugs and drug legalization is an increasingly important political issue as we proceed into the twenty-first century. It is important that we proceed into this era with a keen sense of direction on this issue. Whether we increase our current laws or we proceed in the direction legalization. It is obvious that some reformation of our current policy is needed. But, the drug legalization debate is not a issue that should only concern our political officials and law makers. It should...

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