The Social Effect of Dangerous Drugs on Communities and the Criminal Justice System

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What are the social effect of dangerous drugs on communities and the criminal justice system? We as a society have this ability to have to label all things, good and bad. If we didn’t we wouldn’t be able to live with ourselves. I am just joking, what I really mean, is all we hear in the news or read in the paper is how screwed up society really is. How bad the drug problem is. Well first, what are Dangerous Drugs?

Drugs are chemicals that change the way a person’s body works. You’ve probably heard that drugs are bad for you, but what does that mean and why are they bad? If you’ve ever been sick and had to take medicine, you already know about one kind of drug. Medicines are legal drugs, meaning doctors are allowed to prescribe them for patients, stores can sell them, and people are allowed to buy them. But it’s not legal, or safe, for people to use these medicines any way they want or to buy them from people who are selling them illegally, however cigarettes and alcohol are two other kinds of legal drugs. (In the United States, 18 and over can buy cigarettes and those 21 and over can buy alcohol.) Alcohol and tobacco are still legal but very dangerous because they are very big business. To list them as dangerous would mean the collapse of two very big industries that not only employ millions of workers, but make millions of dollars for a few very powerful people. In other words, the sale of tobacco and alcohol raise millions more in taxation income for the governments. (http://drbenkim.com). Tobacco is nothing compared to alcohol. To become seriously ill from smoking, you need to smoke heavily and probably for years also. To destroy yourself or someone else completely (death), or to cause the most unspeakable social and emoti...

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...provide a useful indicator of a drug’s presence, but they are also used by investigators in the field to examine materials suspected of containing a drug. There are five primary color tests. There is the Marquis, which turns purple in the presence of heroin and morphine. Marquis also becomes orange-brown when mixed with methamphetamines and amphetamines. Then you have the Dillie-Koppanyi which turns violet-blue in the presence of barbiturates. However, the Duquenois-Levine turns purple in the presence of marijuana. Then the Van Urk test which turns blue-purple in the presence of LSD. The last primary color test is the Scott Test which turns pink in the presence of cocaine.

There are many organizations formed to try and help with this sickness. It is very hard to beat the addiction, but it is possible with determination, willpower, and the desire to want to quit.

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