They're Drug Testing Our Sewage
I'll spare you the excrement jokes and just let this idea speak for itself:
Environmental scientists are beginning to use an unsavory new tool -- raw sewage -- to paint an accurate portrait of drug abuse in communities. Like one big, citywide urinalysis, tests at municipal sewage plants in many areas of the United States and Europe, including Los Angeles County, have detected illicit drugs such as cocaine, methamphetamine, heroin and marijuana.Law enforcement officials have long sought a way to come up with reliable and verifiable calculations of narcotics use, to identify new trends and formulate policies. Surveys, the backbone of drug-use estimates, are only as reliable as the people who answer them. But sewage does not lie. [Los Angeles Times]
Admittedly, assuming the methodology is sound, this appears to be a breakthrough technique for obtaining accurate drug use demographics. And it's already beginning to cast doubt on existing data, not surprisingly to the effect of indicating that drug use has been widely underreported:
The scientists were even able to use sewage to estimate individual use and weekly trends. For instance, they estimated that people in Milan used twice as much cocaine, about 35 grams per person per year, than Italy's government surveys had suggested.
That's kind of neat, I suppose, that they can figure out stuff like that. But ya know what? If our drug policy weren't a raging nightmare, drug testing raw sewage wouldn’t be even remotely necessary. Seriously, the moment the government finds itself digging around in our sewage to figure out what drugs we take, it becomes completely clear that we've screwed up our approach to drugs beyond belief. It shouldn’t even be necessary to formulate arguments as to why this is not the behavior of a healthy society. I mean, really. They're drug testing sewage. What's wrong with them?
All of this is symbolic of the utter lack of information and knowledge about drug use that we've achieved in the course of our abundantly destructive attempts to control this very behavior. Nothing could be easier than determining down to the bottle or butt exactly how many Heinekens™ or Newport Lights™ are consumed by the population, but in order to study marijuana use, we must collect frothing f#%king sewage into test tubes, mix in some noxious chemicals, and run the results through some mindbendingly complex algorithm?
Clueless and reeking of poo, the champions of our failed drug control crusade stand before us straight-faced and swear that everything is going according to plan.
U. S. Government Seeks Medieval Solution to Sewage Disposal
Comment posted by Giordano on Sat, 06/28/2008 - 2:40amGranted, taxpayers have a right to know what works, but there are different methods by which that goal might be achieved.
I want to avoid a piss-a-thon or something worse in urban neighborhoods engaged in by people seeking to avoid detection for their drug use. And we really have to act on this. Because this is just like global warming. People won’t believe that an American excrement crisis looms on the horizon until it finally happens.
There are rights to privacy involved in all this. If what comes out of my body or anyone else’s body isn’t private, then what the f*#k is??
The only way to confront science is with better science. And, as always, science has an answer to the drug warrior opposition, whether they like it or not.
The best way to obliterate an organic compound such as a drug metabolite is to treat it with an alkali. Lye dissolves oils and breaks down nearly everything organic, including complex organic compounds such as drug metabolites. Alkaline fluid treatment is even being touted as an ecologically friendly alternative to cremation for disposing of human remains (no carbon dioxide output).
So that’s it. A little bit of lye-based cleanser in the old toilet bowl each day makes the narcs go away. And it keeps your toilet bowl disinfected, shiny and bright.
Giordano
What about septic tanks?
Comment posted by rita on Sat, 06/28/2008 - 11:53amIn my small town, a lot of people still use septic tanks; I think Circle K will be needing to add another public restroom.










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Data Problems for Sewer Mining
Comment posted by Giordano on Wed, 06/25/2008 - 2:49amThe problem with sewer mining is that it gives no accurate or specific numbers for individual drug use. For instance, it can’t distinguish between a small group of hardcore heroin addicts and a much larger group of people who might sample the drug once or twice a month on alternate weekdays.
Sampling individual home effluent would be impractical. People would start pissing on their front lawns. Or maybe they’ll piss on your lawn if they don’t have one of their own.
Given the ONDCP’s compulsive aversion to accurate data, truth, justice, the American way, and a few other things; watch for the ONDCP to error on the side of the highest numbers of addicts while discounting any discussion of the unusually small individual dosages required for each case of addiction.
Giordano