"Please do not excuse me that young people can not make excuses with age and fame." These are the words of Benjamin Haydn who is a painter from the late 1700s to the early 1800s. Although his idea may be out of date, as cited in today's ethical and ethical standards. Another distinguished name came from the book "Grow up". Fame is a dangerous medicine to put out of reach of children. "These words are former child actors and spoken by the present writer Paul Peterson.
Because medicine is illegal it is not dangerous, it is illegal because it is dangerous. Children under 21 years of age who are not smoking, abusing alcohol, or using illegal drugs are almost certainly not. Today, most children do not use illegal drugs, but all children, especially the children of the poorest, are vulnerable to abuse and poisoning. Legalization and non-criminalization - Policies will definitely increase the supply and use of illegal drugs for our children - are almost ineligible as public health methods
Illegal drugs may harm American society, but legitimate drugs (alcohol and tobacco) can pose the greatest risk to children and young people. Both are important portal medicines, one of the earliest medicines used by children and adolescents. For example, children and young people who smoke or drink alcohol are 65 times more likely to use cannabis than people who stop smoking. The younger the experiment, the higher the risk of serious health problems. More than 400,000 Americans die each year from diseases directly related to the use of tobacco - more than the sum of AIDS, car accidents, homicides and suicides. More than 100,000 deaths per year are thought to be due to excessive drinking
Curiosity and Experience Many children will satisfy their interests in the unknown world of tobacco, alcohol and medicine by trying to find ways to inhale, drink or use medicine (Mueller, 1999 , P. 316). Teenagers under development tend to find good things for them. "Some young people are always interested in certain mysteries, adventures, dangers, and illegal things" (Wilkerson, 1971, p. 90). Curiosity was an excuse to start developing habits, but it has been discovered that a personality defect later will continue drug poisoning.