A huge challenge
with dealing with the indigenous issues of health, alcohol, domestic violence or any other issue is that as soon as a solution
is put forward, someone raises the race flag. The solution lies in NOT recognising race, but recognizing
the human side of the problem. These are problems for every part of our society.
There is
no denying there are problems in indigenous communities. Many or even most of them stem from the over consumption
of alcohol, and the high level of alcoholism within the communities. However, it IS racist to ban alcohol
sales to indigenous people. What is more appropriate is to ban alcohol sales to the whole community, indigenous
and non-indigenous people, and to enforce the total ban of alcohol to those communities.
This requires
not just the community in question, but the whole of the region, preventing alcohol delivery from outside parties to those
communities.
However, the problem extends also to the regional and capital cities.
The same philosophy applies. Whilst the cities cannot have prohibition enforced, the treatment of
the alcoholism as a disease can be delivered to all who need it, and enforced if necessary.
Reverse
racism as is currently practised does nothing to help the individual develop and learn personal responsibility.
True community support will work with every person in the community, without creating racial or any other divisions.
Responsible
service of alcohol as is currently practised is totally irresponsible, and the number of teenagers binge drinking is testimony
to that. If alcohol sales were limited to only those of legal age, and in reasonable amounts, which at
this stage are not prescribed, then a start could be made on resolving the problem.
Hotel hours,
alcohol content, genuine responsible service of alcohol and more will do a great deal to reduce the problems of excess alcohol
consumption.
Education programs at school levels, showing the truth about the problems of alcohol
excesses, including the car accidents, rape victims, medical problems and domestic violence, would serve as a start to reducing
the problem in children. In addition, branding alcoholism so that the children rejected it would have longer
lasting impact.
For older teenagers, the branding, in the ways that work with teenagers, is probably
the only way through, in conjunction with the responsible service regulations.
For alcoholics and dependencies
of every kind, genuine detoxification and total abstinence – enforced if necessary – are the only way back.
There are a number of new detoxification methods coming into mainstream now, and these need to be adopted urgently,
across all societal strata. While controversial, it cannot be denied that they are effective.
Whilst costly at international clinics, they could be adopted as hospital cost practices if adopted by national clinics
here in Australia, for no more cost than a regular stay in hospital.
For genuine cases of alcoholism
and drug addiction, true detoxification measures would include enforced rehabilitation centre attention, total abstinence
from their choice of addictive substance, for at least three months, chemical testing for cleanliness, education while in
rehabilitation in areas such as general health, diet, nutrition, personal development and goal setting, and leadership, so
that when they re-enter society and their community circles in particular, they can play a leading role in raising the level
of community health and welfare, instead of being a drain on it.
For those who say that it is an
invasion of the rights of the individual to enforce rehabilitation onto drug users against their consent, take a moment and
think of the lives of crime many lead to pay for the cost of their addictions, the families they destroy – starting
with their own, and the havoc they may be wreaking in the community with robberies, and other crimes either to pay for the
habit, or because of the induced states and behaviours because of the habit. Who asked the permission of
those other affected people to have their rights and lives violated by these individuals, addicted and under the control of
a substance peddled by an entrepreneurial individual who knows that selling either alcohol or illicit drugs is a sound business
operation for them?
A further abuse issue is the sniffing of glue, paint, petrol and a number of other
substances. In Central Australia, a number of fuel outlets sell petrol that has a foul smelling additive
that prevents this practice. There is no practical reason this cannot be adopted nationwide.
That would be the end of the petrol-sniffing problem. The same principle can be used for other sniffing
substances – this is not a difficult solution to think of, just a common-sense application of currently available technology.
WHAT CAN
YOU DO?
Learn the truth about detoxification from drugs and alcohol. It doesn’t happen
with cosy chats; it takes abstinence and human system flushing, as well as with mental and emotional clearing.
Agitate
for genuine detoxification centres in your community. There is unlikely to be a community in Australia
without a person with a drug or alcohol problem, so there needs to be a network of detoxification centres as well.
Hospital based centres are more likely to be more effective, especially when combined with staffing for enforced detention
for clients when necessary.