creators home
creators.com lifestyle web

Recently

Memorializing Days The unofficial start of summer is an official holiday to remember all Americans who have died in wartime service for our country. That's easy for me to do, because I cry every time I watch the opening scenes of "Saving Private Ryan." I'm …Read more. Enough Already Rarely do I go back to back on the same topic. But I'm awash in readers' responses to a daughter's plea about her alcoholic mother, so here we go. Last week, Cathy W. from Milwaukee asked, "When is enough enough?" Her family wants to do …Read more. Into Action Right now, there are too many people in crisis for me to fill this space with the musing of my own head. It's time for action. Dear Mr. Moyers: You talk all the time about alcoholics or people who use drugs. But what about the rest of us, the family?…Read more. Lives of Faith This is a short story about faith and recovery — recovery not from addiction but from tragedy — a story involving people I knew of but never had met, even though we had shared a horrific moment, a sudden jolt of electricity that forever …Read more.
more articles

The Politics of Addiction

Share Comment

Not even Rush Limbaugh dared to criticize Sen. Edward Kennedy about his ongoing battle with brain cancer, a chronic disease.

But it didn't take much for some narrow-minded critics to jump all over Kennedy's son Patrick when the congressman from Rhode Island announced this week that he was seeking treatment again for another chronic illness, addiction.

"At some point, we've got to say, when is enough enough?" Giovanni Cicione, chairman of the Rhode Island Republican Party, told The Associated Press. Cicione suggested that Kennedy needs to consider whether he's serving his constituents properly.

Either Cicione is ignorant about addiction or he deliberately chose to politicize the younger Kennedy's medical condition for his party's gain. And that's the problem about the politics of addiction in America these days. Unlike the cases with other diseases, when it comes to alcoholism and drug dependence, there's a double standard for judging people who suffer relapses or recurrences of their illnesses. Such is the stigma of addiction, too.

That's not to excuse the younger Kennedy's responsibility to manage his chronic illness. Just like diabetics and people with hypertension, addicted people must work programs of recovery actively in order to lessen the chances that their treatable but incurable condition will return. As a policy advocate, I've known and worked with Patrick Kennedy in Washington on addiction and mental illness issues; his political passion for legislation to expand help for people like him is matched only by his personal zeal to help himself.

"People like Patrick and me need to deal with our recovery one day at a time for the rest of our lives," former Republican Rep. Jim Ramstad, who has been a recovering alcoholic since 1981 and has mentored Kennedy, told me. "Those of us in recovery, especially in the first couple of years, experience bumps in the road and need preventative maintenance.

Patrick knows what he needs to do, and he is doing it. It is never easy, though."

A few days before Kennedy sought help, a colleague of his in the House, Rep. John Sullivan of Oklahoma, announced that he, too, was checking into treatment, for what he called his "addiction to alcohol." The Republican lawmaker has had several legal run-ins linked to intoxication over the past few years. (I couldn't find anything on the Internet to suggest that Cicione has an ally in Oklahoma.)

Sullivan and Kennedy are proof that addiction is a bipartisan illness and that it does not discriminate. And their travails come at what is perhaps a definable moment in our country's relentless battle against the victims of addiction, namely, the people afflicted with it and their families. President Barack Obama's drug czar, former Seattle Police Chief Gil Kerlikowske, has called for an outright end to the failed "war on drugs," shifting the emphasis from tough law enforcement and international interdiction to prevention and treatment. Talking heads in the media are debating whether illicit drugs should be decriminalized or even legalized. And with health care reform once again on the front burner, advocates are pushing to make sure that addiction treatment isn't left out.

Not too long ago, when a politico hit bottom, his problem was cloaked in "leave-of-absence" or "time-off" lingo, meant to disguise the real issue. Sullivan and Kennedy are brave to identify their struggles publicly. If timing is everything, then now is the time for all of us to change the terms of the debate for the sake of those who still suffer, for people who haven't had the opportunity to find hope, help and healing from their chronic illness.

William C. Moyers is the vice president of external affairs for the Hazelden Foundation and the author of "Broken," his best-selling memoirs. Please send your questions to William Moyers at William@WilliamMoyers.com. To find out more about William Moyers and read his past columns, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2009 CREATORS SYNDICATE INC.


Comments

0 Comments | Post Comment
Already have an account? Log in.
New Account  
Your Name:
Your E-mail:
Your Password:
Confirm Your Password:

Please allow a few minutes for your comment to be posted.

Enter the numbers to the right:  
Creators.com comments policy
Other similar columns
Dr. Sylvia Rimm
Sylvia Rimm on Raising Kids
by Dr. Sylvia Rimm
Dr. Rallie McAllister
Your Health
by Dr. Rallie McAllister
Dr. David Lipschitz
Lifelong Health
by Dr. David Lipschitz
More
William Moyers
May. `12
Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa
29 30 1 2 3 4 5
6 7 8 9 10 11 12
13 14 15 16 17 18 19
20 21 22 23 24 25 26
27 28 29 30 31 1 2
About the author About the author
Write the author Write the author
Printer friendly format Printer friendly format
Email to friend Email to friend
View by Month