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OTHER ISSUES

Freedom Magazine. Addiction issue cover
April 2017
Vol. 49, Issue 2
Freedom Magazine. The Data Demon issue cover
February 2017
Vol. 49, Issue 1
Freedom Magazine. The 2016 Expansion issue cover
December 2016 Special Edition
Freedom Magazine. The Shocking Truth issue cover
October 2016
Vol. 48, Issue 3
Freedom Magazine. Military Spending issue cover
June-July 2016
Vol. 48, Issue 2
Freedom Magazine. Pill Pushers issue cover
April-May 2016
Vol. 48, Issue 1
Freedom Magazine. Back to School issue cover
September 2015
Vol. 47, Issue 8
Freedom Magazine. Veterans issue cover
August 2015
Vol. 47, Issue 7
Freedom Magazine. Infrastructure issue cover
July 2015
Vol. 47, Issue 6
Freedom Magazine. Net Freedom issue cover
June 2015
Vol. 47, Issue 5
Freedom Magazine. Patriot Games issue cover
May 2015
Vol. 47, Issue 4
Freedom Magazine. Freedom of Information Act issue cover
April 2015
Vol. 47, Issue 3
Freedom Magazine. People Who Read Are a Dying Breed issue cover
March 2015
Vol. 47, Issue 2
Get Religion? issue cover
February 2015
Vol. 47, Issue 1
Freedom Magazine. Scientology Expansion issue cover
December 2014 Special Edition
Freedom Magazine. Held Back issue cover
November 2014
Vol. 46, Issue 4
Freedom Magazine. LA Under the Influence issue cover
September 2014
Vol. 46, Issue 2
Military: Are They Drugged to Death issue cover
August 2014
Vol. 46, Issue 1

FLORIDA ISSUES

Freedom Magazine. The Year in Review issue cover
December 2016
Clearwater Special Edition
Freedom Magazine. Clearwater Building cover
Special Clearwater Edition.
August 2015
Freedom Magazine. Building a Great City issue cover
Florida.
Vol. 20, Issue 1
Freedom Magazine. Flag issue cover
July 2014
Special Edition
PUBLISHED BY
Church of Scientology
since 1968
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Drug Re-Education

With the ’supply’ front of the Mexican Drug War looking grim, Mexico’s Drug-Free World chapter attacks the ’demand’ aspect: cutting off criminals’ supply of users by educating young people on the dangers of doing drugs.

Mexico is a country crippled by the global drug trade. Cartels dominate the illicit market, controlling an estimated 70 percent of the foreign narcotics channeled into the United States while wars wage internally for control of lucrative trafficking routes. Meanwhile, the Mexican government’s War on Drugs wages a desperate effort to dismantle the cartels and end their reign of violence. At least 100,000 lives have been lost in the melee, including the murder in September of federal congressman Gabriel Gomez, the most high-profile politician killed by the cartels in recent years.

It is a largely futile fight. Corruption destabilizes government and law enforcement in Mexico, with officials at the municipal, state and federal levels bribed or intimidated by cartels to turn a blind eye or, worse, participate directly in the drug trade as conspirators. In a recent case in the western state of Michoacán, mayors of three cities were arrested on organized-crime charges for alleged ties with the Knights Templar drug cartel.

Two thousand Mexico State Auxiliary Security Forces officers, trained on the Truth About Drugs program, have distributed drug education booklets across the state.

And now a strategic shift in this illicit economy has dealers operating as wholesalers rather than in the more traditional courier role—taking payment in product, not cash, and making them nearly impossible to track. For the foreseeable future, there will be no shortage of drugs in Mexico.

But among those who intend to do something about it are business owners and Scientologists Salomon and Lucy Dabbah of Mexico City. Recognizing that the ultimate answer to the drug scourge is to educate young people to stay away from drugs, the Dabbahs head the Mexico chapter of the Los Angeles-based Foundation for a Drug-Free World. The centerpiece of the Foundation’s work is the Truth About Drugs program and its fact-filled, hard-hitting audiovisual and printed educational materials. The program includes booklets handed out by the tens of thousands that give young people the straight facts, with no scare tactics, covering a dozen of the most commonly abused substances—marijuana, cocaine, prescription drugs, alcohol, heroin and more.

“When you speak to someone and give them the truth, rather than the lies they have heard from drug dealers, when you clarify for them what a drug actually is—a poison—their response is incredible. Their minds and their lives can change in front of you,” said Salomon Dabbah.

  • Mexican drug cartels take in between $19 billion and $29 billion annually from U.S. drug sales.
  • Illegal drug use in Mexico rose 87% between 2002 and 2011.

The Dabbahs began their personal drug education mission by providing the program and its materials to schools throughout Mexico, including those attended by their 11 grandchildren, who are well-versed participants in the project.

In 2011, Salomon and Lucy presented the Truth About Drugs program to attendees at a school safety conference held by the Ministry of Public Security in Mexico City. When the director of Mexico City’s School Safety Police, Commander Lucio Faustino Gómez, saw the program, he knew it was the no-nonsense, fact-driven educational program he needed.

  • Mexico is the primary supplier of illegal opium derivatives to the United States.
  • The U.S. DEA reported a 324% increase in heroin seizures at the Mexican border between 2008 and 2013.

From that conference came a formal working partnership of Drug-Free World Mexico and Mexico City´s School Safety Unit (USE-Unidad de Seguridad Escolar), a branch of the state police force focused on drug and crime prevention in middle and high schools. They share the same goal: cut off criminals’ supply of users through education.

As the first order of business, 80 School Safety Unit officers were trained to deliver the Truth About Drugs program in middle schools and high schools, using the Education Package from the Foundation for a Drug-Free World: a full semester of lesson plans; the public service announcements “They Said, They Lied,” debunking the common falsehoods told by drug dealers; the documentary film The Truth About Drugs: Real People, Real Stories, high-impact accounts by former users who survived addiction; and sets of the dozen Truth About Drugs booklets.

  • 90% of the cocaine that enters the U.S. transits through Mexico.

In a partnership in the state of Mexico, Drug-Free World Mexico has teamed up with Auxiliary Security Forces, responsible for internal security, narcotics detection and protection against drug-induced violence. Coordinated by the president of the Mexican Association of Police Instructors, 2,000 Auxiliary Forces officers were trained on the Truth About Drugs program, after which they distributed 30,000 booklets across the state in a single weekend.

In April 2014, the Mexico Ministry of Health issued an invitation to Foundation for a Drug-Free World to schedule drug prevention activities in all schools and other youth institutions. The Mexican Red Cross collaborated by mobilizing thousands of volunteers to hand out Truth About Drugs booklets at weekly expos organized by the Ministry of Health. The ministry also provided dozens of its staff each week to do massive distributions of Truth About Drugs booklets at weekly fairs and other venues throughout the city.

From the success of these partnerships came a grant from the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime field office in Mexico to pilot the program in high-risk schools in Mexico City—resulting in presentations of the Truth About Drugs to 37,000 students in 104 schools.

All told, Drug-Free World has distributed nearly 250,000 drug education booklets to young people throughout the nation.

Salomon Dabbah told of the hundreds of students they see change their minds about drug use, literally before their eyes. “You can hear a pin drop when we show the videos of kids talking to kids about drugs.”

  • Mexico is also a main supplier of marijuana and methamphetamines in the U.S.
  • Some 100,000 people have been killed in the Mexican Drug War.
Sources: Office of National Drug Control Policy; “Barriers to accessing substance abuse treatment in Mexico: national comparative analysis by migration status,” Erick Guerrero et al; “Mexico Drug War Fast Facts,” CNN Library, U.S. Dept of State; Drug Enforcement Administration

Dabbah said a 10-year-old girl who approached him after a lecture was representative of the program’s effect. “She told me that friends had offered her drugs within the last few days and she was considering trying them until the Truth About Drugs presentation. In that one hour, she had made up her mind that she wanted to live her life drug-free. This happens with many students. And each is a user the cartels will never have.”

“We are only beginning,” said Salomon Dabbah. “Our aim is to create a drug-free generation in Mexico and bring back the greatness of our people and our country.”