The Crack Cocaine Epidemic of the Mid 1980s

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“Just Say No!” A statement that takes us deep into yet another decade in the history of the United States which was excited by controversies, social issues, and drug abuse. The topic of this statement is fueled by the growing abuse of cocaine in the mid 1980s. I shall discuss the effects of the crack cocaine epidemic of the mid 1980s from a cultural and social stand point because on that decade this country moved to the rhythms and the pace of this uncanny drug. Cocaine took its told on American society by in the 1980s; it ravaged with every social group, race, class, etc. It reigned over the United States without any prejudices. Crack cocaine was the way into urban society, because of its affordability in contrast to the powdered form. In society the minorities were the ones most affected by the growing excess of crime and drug abuse, especially African Americans; so the question was “Why was nearly everybody convicted in California federal court of crack cocaine trafficking black?” (Webb: Day 3). The growing hysteria brought forth many questions which might seem to have concrete answers, but the fact of the matter is they are all but conspiracy in the end, even though it does not take away the ambiguity and doubt. I will take on only a few topics from the vast array of events and effects this period in time had tended to. Where and who this epidemic seemed to affect more notably, and perhaps how the drugs came about such territories and people. What actions this countries authority took to restore moral sanity, and how it affected people gender wise.

The use of cocaine had reached a worrying numbers in contrast to that of the early 1970s.

Statistically it went from 5.4 million in 1974, to a sky rocketing 21....

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...n Francisco Mercury News 19 August, 1996: Print.

(http://www.narconews.com/darkalliance/drugs/start.htm)

Kozel, Nicholas J, and Adams, Edgar H. Cocaine Use in America: Epidemiological and Clinical

Perspective. Maryland: 3rd edition. Department of Health and Human Services

(DHHS), 1990. Print. (http://archives.drugabuse.gov/pdf/monographs/61.pdf)

Drug Abuse. The Crack Cocaine Epidemic: Health Consequences and Treatment. Fact Sheet for

the Chairman, Select Committee on Narcotics Abuse and Control, House of

Representatives. US General Accountings Office. Washington DC: Human Resource

Division, January 1991. Print. http://www.legistorm.com/showFile/

L2xzX3Njb3JlL2dhby9wZGYvMTk5MS8x/ful19849.pdf

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