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Uncovering America’s methamphetamine history

Farah Siddiqi, Missouri News Service by Farah Siddiqi, Missouri News Service
April 19, 2024
in Heartland Newsfeed Podcast Network, Illinois, Missouri, Public News Service
Reading Time: 2 mins read
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(Missouri News Service/Public News Service) — Missouri may, at one time, have had a reputation as the “meth-lab capital of the country” – but a five-part podcast uncovers its true history.

“Home Cooked: A Fifty-Year History of Meth in America” delves into the relationship of methamphetamine use with broader drug policies and social and cultural ramifications.

Reporter Olivia Weeks with The Daily Yonder, who produced and hosts the podcast, said meth use was once associated with rural areas, but that assumption is inaccurate. Weeks said Missouri fought back against its meth-lab reputation.

“They policed their meth-lab problem really strongly, and had really high lab bust numbers and then those have basically disappeared,” she said. “But now, the rest of the country is dealing with this problem that was associated with Missouri.”

In the podcast, she explains that most of the methamphetamine entering the United States comes through commercial points of entry, hidden in legal shipping containers, rather than being smuggled across the border by individuals.

Weeks said the real dangers of meth result in part from it being outlawed. She explained that even when it was a prescription drug in the 1950s and ’60s, there was illegal use – but at least it was made by pharmaceutical companies. Once methamphetamine became illegal, she said, the lack of control over its production has led to environmental damage and dangerous chemical processes being attempted in home labs.

“The main problem, main danger of using methamphetamine is that you don’t know what’s in it,” she said, “and you don’t know what dose you’re taking.”

She acknowledged the pharmaceutical industry’s history of exploiting addictive drugs, and cautioned against a simple solution such as decriminalizing or legalizing meth use. Instead, she said, her research has prompted her to support harm-reduction strategies that keep users safe.

This story was produced with original reporting by Olivia Weeks for The Daily Yonder.


The entire miniseries for the podcast is below:

Heartland Newsfeed Radio Network
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Listen to morning newsbreaks, commentary and other tidbits of news and media content, which is also featured at the header of our website. Includes archives from programs that aired on-air via heartlandnewsfeed.com

Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/heartland-newsfeed-radio-network–2904397/support.

SPECIAL SERIES: Home Cooked – Episode 1
byHeartland Newsfeed

In the early 2000s, the “Faces of Meth” were tacked to cork boards in high school hallways and the nightly news was full of meth lab explosions. In this period, the stimulant was stigmatized as a white trash drug, and thought to favor rural trailer parks and farmhouses over inner-city drug dens. Today, however, meth use is growing fastest among non-white populations and rapidly infiltrating big, east-coast cities like New York and Boston. What changed? And why was meth seen as a hillbilly drug in the first place?

Show Notes

Rebroadcast with permission from Public News Service and The Daily Yonder. Originally recorded on March 8, 2024.

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SPECIAL SERIES: Home Cooked – Episode 1
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Farah Siddiqi, Missouri News Service
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Born and raised in Canada to an early Pakistani immigrant family, Farah Siddiqi was naturally drawn to the larger purpose of making connections and communicating for public reform. She moved to America in 2000 spending most of her time in California and Massachusetts. She has also had the opportunity to live abroad and travel to over 20 countries. She is a multilingual communicator with on-air experience as a reporter/anchor/producer for television, web, and radio across multiple markets including the USA, Canada, Dubai, and Hong Kong.

She moved back to America in 2023 with a unique International perspective and understanding. She finds herself making Nashville, Tennessee her new home, and hopes to continue her passion for philanthropy and making connections to help bridge misunderstandings specifically with issues related to race, ethnicity, interfaith, and an overall sense of belonging.

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