There is no medicine ... so that it sounds - there is no medicine. This applies primarily to unregulated substances and recreational drugs. Most strictly limiting children will say they do not have drugs, but everyone can! You need to do a single thing ... Do not take medicine
Therefore it is non-toxic, as it is addictive, painful and expensive, it is very important! Okay, I still have a problem. You do not have medicine, send a healthy lifestyle, or waste your money, do you ruin your life with medicine? It is amazing! I just heard three words that made me feel better. These three words: Free!
In general, substance abuse studies that are widely practiced in Malaysia are dedicated to promoting a healthy lifestyle, a drugless society. A non-toxic society has significant implications for approximately 283.1 million people. This means to reduce crime such as traffic accidents, theft and murder, to reduce the enthusiasm of HIV and AIDS, to reduce the number of drug rehabilitation centers, and to increase the number of staff to make Malaysia a fully developed country To do. By understanding the main causes of the problem, we can cooperate to treat and prevent further expansion of this disease in our community.
The stated anti-drug goal is to reduce the production, supply and use of certain drugs, and ultimately to build a "non-toxic society". As the United Nations Drug Management Plan in 1998 once said: non-toxic world: we can do it! There is little need to say that such a world has not yet been realized: Over the past 50 years worldwide drug usage rates are steadily growing. But more importantly, the influence of drug management is far more serious than anyone else. Unregulated Crime Management Drug trade has expanded to one of the largest commodity markets on the planet with devastating costs. Widespread criminalization and punishment by people using drugs also means that drug warfs are mostly wars against drug users - wars against people
The Belarusian version of today's "drug war" is based on three pillars: expensive imprisonment, punitive drug law, and the Department of Interior's (MIA) insatiable passion to create a utopian 'non-toxic country' . The result of our approach to combating narcotics is nothing but a disaster. The emergence of dangerous synthetic drugs to prevent the epidemic of HIV and the public denial of the basic human rights of a minority of drug use. This policy brief focuses on the following.