In Vietnam, the water buffalo have always shunned the local opium plants. They donβt like them. But when the American bombs started to fall all around them during the war, the buffalo left their normal grazing grounds, broke into the opium fields, and began to chew. They would then look a little dizzy and dulled. When they were traumatized, it seems, they wanted β like the mongoose, like us β to escape from their thoughts.
I'm glad that looking at the animal kingdom reminded the author of the fact that most people who use "evil" drugs never get addicted or have trouble of any sort. It reminds me of some radio shows where people call up about being recreational meth users, and how it treats them just fine in their moderate use.
Some drug use causes horrible harm, as I know very well, but the overwhelming majority of people who use prohibited drugs do it because they get something good out of it β a fun night out dancing, the ability to meet a deadline, the chance of a good nightβs sleep, or insights into parts of their brain they couldnβt get to on their own. For them, itβs a positive experience, one that makes their lives better. Thatβs why so many of them choose it. They are not suffering from false consciousness, or hubris. They donβt need to be stopped from harming themselves, because they are not harming themselves. As the American writer Nick Gillespie puts it: βFar from our drugs controlling us, by and large we control our drugs; as with alcohol, the primary motivation is to enjoy ourselves, not to destroy ourselves . . . There is such a thing as responsible drug use, and it is the norm, not the exception.β
So, although it is against my instincts, I realized I couldnβt give an honest account of drug use in this book if I talked only about the harm it causes. If Iβm serious about this subject, I also have to look at how drug use is deeply widespread β and mostly positive.