No, I don't need to pick out one viewpoint.
You say drugs were rare, only amopng the riffraff... well, the riffraff were my family I guess. Because my great uncle struggled with drugs. That's what happens I guess when you get to live on the margins of a society because you're one of its undesirables (gay). And my aunty got shipped off to an institution because she suffered some brain damage at birth. My mother-in-law was in residential school, and a large number of the rest of my family are native, so they certainly weren't accepted. Do I feel somehow 'good' about reflecting back about what life was like in the 50's for some of my family members? No. Who would given what it was? So the times I've pointed out that you guys think there were no drugs or that they didn't effect 'good' families, only because they didn't effect yours, and newspapers didn't address it the same, I mean it. When I talk about the shift between then and now of over coverage of horrible events, I meant it.
I'll listen to all the views, but I will reflect on them in light of ALL I know, not just the views of three people on an internet forum.
firstly, I have never referred to anyone as 'riff raff', and secondly I've repeated several times that my
life was in the city, with lots of people, large schools, and it was mainstream society, so I'll repeat
that again.
I've said before that anyone familiar with the first nations and how they were back then will have to
come forward and 'speak from their recollection', because I had no contact with first nations back in the
fifties, sixties, but in the seventies I was able to meet many first nations people, because of our
connections with many girls ball teams, and we went onto reservations, and they came to us, and we
participated in sports together.
There were many different kids in those 1500 in jr. high, but almost 100% were from
1st,2nd,3rd generations brits, and the rest all over europe and other places, including
far east, but I could count on one hand the number of first nations kids that ever
attended any of the schools I went to, so I really didn't have any contact, and didn't
even think about first nations kids, (we only knew of them as indians back then,
thankfully that has been dropped long ago).
Don't know anything about residential schools, so if you are quite educated on that subject I will listen
to you, 'and believe' you.
My views were of the 50's only, that is early 50's thru to 59'60, and that just about does it when it
comes to drugs with school kids and young people, someone else will have to continue on from there.
I do not generalize, I zeroed on my 'time' only, not anyone elses, and 'my' city living only, not anything
elses, but because I grew up in the city, went to school with lots of kids, and 1500 in jr. high, that
does give me a very large view of the drug 'non problem' in schools at that time, there was none.
The problem here is 'that' I have been accused of generalizing, and have not done that, i have stuck to
my area of expertise.
I will only speak for myself, and others have to do the same, and we shouldn't clump in together, as we
all have individual lives and pasts.
I would love to hear from those 'who know' of other areas of life in the 50's, those which I am not familiar
with, always like to learn.