Timeflies, what a rush. I expected great music from the duo at the Ivies concert—songs like the one whose chorus repeated “motherfucker what up” 15 times never fail—but I didn’t expect such natural flow from a YouTube superstar. I originally thought a freestyle seemed ambitious, but boy did he deliver. 

Opening with a list of 150 random Bowdoin related things took some pretty serious skill, but his emphatic endorsement of Bowdoin’s drug habits really put his whole performance on another level. It takes guts to shout “man, every school has Adderall!” before a group of 1,500 college students, guts that clearly only Timeflies had.

Timeflies’ claim was relatively typical: musicians everywhere love to talk about their drug habits. It’s almost strangely fitting that Timeflies, which comes from Tufts University, would brag about how normal Adderall is. Yet, sarcasm aside, it should be painfully clear how inappropriate his comment was. 

For now, let’s forget about the fact that Bowdoin’s recent Adderall bust forced two students to resign from the school and 10 others to face disciplinary action. Despite the very real ramifications of “resigning” from a college mid-year, the argument must be wider than the fate of a few students. 

The relaxed attitude that Timeflies and many Bowdoin students take toward Adderall is scary and needs rethinking before the problem becomes serious. While certainly not as dangerous as other frequently abused opiates like OxyContin, Adderall is still an amphetamine. 

Amphetamines, called “speed” on the street, are addictive stimulants. Adderall typically comes in much lower doses than street amphetamines, but the effects are similar. Users develop an intense focus, lose their appetites and feel more awake. 

These effects have a wide appeal and with the number of prescriptions skyrocketing—sales have quintupled since 2002 according to a Huffington Post article—the pills are becoming more and more available. A University of Southern California study recently showed that 95 percent of students could obtain a false diagnosis of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (the disorder for which Adderall is prescribed) by faking the symptoms most commonly associated with it. Doctors are handing out hard drugs and people are developing serious, debilitating addictions.

The pills pose a serious threat for anyone who abuses them. Even in academic situations, the pills put serious stress on the heart and cause erratic behavior. Over time, users begin to act similarly to meth addicts. But given that government studies have shown 30 percent of student users report taking Adderall and other prescription stimulants to stay awake and party, the implications of the abuse become far more serious.

When combined with alcohol, Adderall suppresses many of the body’s cues to stop drinking. On the drug, people can drink more and stay up longer. The heart takes even heavier abuse as Adderall counteracts the depressive quality of alcohol. According to a 2013 study by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Service Administration,  visits to the hospital related to prescription stimulants nearly quadrupled among young adults between 2006 and 2010, with nearly half of the 15,000 visits due to mixing alcohol with stimulants. Still, people refuse to see Adderall as a dangerous drug. Only 2 percent of students reported seeing the drug as “very dangerous” in a 2007 study by the National Institute of Health. Eighty-one percent viewed the drug as “not dangerous at all” or  only “slightly dangerous.”

Even here at Bowdoin, kids seem to take the drug rather lightly. According to a 2013 Orient article, 15 percent of students on campus reported having used the drug in 2012 and a whopping 42 percent overestimated that number. In other words, kids see it as a relatively normal thing.
Timeflies’ assertion fits in with the Bowdoin ethos that way. The drug is no big deal, or so the thinking goes. The recent spike in media coverage surrounding OxyContin and the road to heroin addiction should strike fear in the students who view Adderall as safe. Prescription drugs certainly aren’t safe just because a doctor hands them out, but few seem to recognize the danger. Adderall is an incredibly dangerous drug when abused and Bowdoin students need to view it that way. Until the campus has a change of heart though, we’re just asking for a disaster.