Addiction In Brave New World

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According to the National Institute of Health, 100,000 people each year die in the United States because of addiction. As of 2010, more than 23 million Americans had an addiction to drugs or alcohol and these numbers are rising. (Addiction). Addiction disillusions one’s ability to confront, deal, and handle issues. Those who support the use of prescription drugs provide evidence that drugs are needed to relieve pain and other health problems, however new studies reveal that more people are becoming addicted to prescribed drugs than those that actually need them. Additionally, repeated drug use causes horrendous consequences and adverse side-effects. As seen in the Huxley’s novel Brave New World, addiction has become an essential part of their …show more content…

From birth, people apart of Huxley’s society are conditioned to take a drug called soma whenever they do not feel content. At one point, Lenina, a citizen of Huxley’s society, is without access to soma and is “left to face the horrors of Malpais unaided” (Huxley 111). Lenina, like everyone else in this society, is so reliant on drugs that when put in an uncomfortable situations with any soma, she does not have the necessary social and mental skills to cope with the present issues. In addition, doctors in the society state that “soma may make [someone] lose a few years” off their life. (Huxley 154). The government pushes every individual to be reliant on soma, even knowing that it will shorten the lifespan of the citizens. Huxley uses this dystopian government pushing soma on individuals as foreshadowing for what today’s could become.
Huxley proposes that Brave New World’s society is foreshadowing for what Today’s society will be like. “Try to imagine what ‘living with one’s family meant’...one of the boys...turned pale at the mere description and was on the point of being sick” (Huxley 36-37). In Huxley’s creation, society views family and parents as something dirty and is rejected from society, thus children do not have have the support system to stop themselves from becoming addicted. “She contends that the role of family members in getting an addict to treatment is crucial” …show more content…

“As much as one might deplore the addict's initial decision to take drugs, it is clearly in everyone's interest that we rise above our moral outrage and offer treatment to all who need it” (Leshner). “Estimates made by the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) state that "every $1 invested in addiction treatment programs yields a return of between $4 and $7 in reduced drug-related crime, criminal justice costs, and theft alone." (Preface).
Therefore, drugs themselves are a neutral third party, and it is based on the user’s reason and intent for taking the drug that determines whether the drug is helpful or harmful for user. In the United States, there is a constant social pressure to fix in minor convenience by seeking out a doctor and asking for drugs for a miracle quick-fix. The almost unrestricted access to prescription drugs is directly proportionate to the increase in prescription drug abuse cases. Unless this easy availability to drugs changes, addiction rates are going to continue to rise and result in the death of thousands of

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