Daring to face the fierce malice in the comment section, the confidence comes from speaking the truth, with roots and evidence.
1 In my online and offline drug prevention and rehabilitation advocacy, I basically do not speak baseless falsehoods. I certainly do not spread rumors. For example, these assertions lack scientific basis: "One puff of drugs leads to addiction," "There are only 0 times and countless times when it comes to drug use," "If he can't quit smoking, how can he quit drugs?"
2 In the past, I rarely exposed these statements. Because from a social effect perspective, rumors have their own power. Sometimes large-scale rumors and dissemination can indeed have a positive effect of making people fear drugs like the plague.
3 The two facts I will talk about next can withstand verification in the real world.
One is that many drug rehabilitation individuals have successfully quit drugs in real life. The drug situation report released once a year contains relevant figures. Of course, many rehabilitation individuals will relapse in their remaining lives, but the 3-year and 5-year relapse rates are far from 100%.
Fortunately, all these figures can withstand verification. Relevant departments have investigated, statistically analyzed, and accumulated this data. As long as you want to know more, you can find the drug rehabilitation social worker in your community or street.
Two, the statement "If you can't even quit smoking, how can you quit drugs" is not valid. Because the person making this statement likely does not know that the addictive nature of tobacco is actually stronger than that of many, many drugs! Tobacco addiction is inherently harder to quit.
Fortunately, there are also studies in The Lancet regarding the addictive nature of tobacco and drugs. The most famous result is in Figure 1. The addictive potential of tobacco may only be second to heroin and cocaine, stronger than ecstasy and marijuana. Tobacco has strong physiological addiction and also strong psychological addiction. If we calculate the "cumulative proportion of users who try a substance out of curiosity and ultimately become dependent on it," tobacco is far ahead.
Now I would like to ask everyone a critical question: Have you ever smoked? Do you become addicted after one puff of a cigarette? During my university period, I once smoked an entire pack of cigarettes in one go, and to this day, I smoke 1-2 cigarettes on average every 2 years. But I have not become addicted; for many years, I have been educating others about the harms of smoking, secondhand smoke, and thirdhand smoke. Therefore, I fundamentally do not believe that a substance with strong addictive properties like tobacco can lead to addiction after just one puff. In fact, addictiveness is a generally quantifiable academic concept, and determining whether it constitutes addiction is theoretically a very rigorous legal issue.
Summary: From this wave of public opinion, we can see that the grassroots anti-drug social atmosphere here is excellent and very good. Personally, I believe that even after learning a bit more factual information, you will still firmly oppose drugs and stay away from them. Let's work together to make the world free of drugs and bring blessings to everyone.