Both your hosts to the discussion about drug testing lied to the audience when they agreed that there was a concerted effort to educate children about drug problems. That's why I wrote The Original Drug Manual for Kids - for families that care about real drug-related problems. I did an internet search for comprehensive curriculum for drug abuse, addiction and dependency and got ZERO hits. I contacted several organizations that dealt with the end results of alcoholism and drug abuse inquiring as to a curriculum for my school and got zero results. I specified that I wanted a curriculum that dealt with all kinds of drugs, legal, illegal, and medicinal [like drug Rush is recovering from] and dealt with abuse, addiction, and dependency and I was told more than once it didn't exist.
So I wrote a curriculum that can be found at http://www.geocities.com/rimchamp77/odm4k.html . The lexionary states that the obvious truths that teens already know: the War on Drugs is an abusive and immoral policy, that those who sell drugs of all kinds deliberately mislead people, that drug war advocates like the anti-drug [who refuse to face me in formal debate btw] also deliberately mislead people, and that authority figures frequently act in an abusive manner towards kids. I also tell them that the War on Drugs has absolutely no basis in truth and that no advocate can begin to make a case for the policy - without lying.
I offer the kids strategies for finding reliable information about drugs, give some basics on how they work and how they can be taken, and the limitations for drug use of any kind [only for short-term and only as needed - if you use them when you don't need them they lose their effectiveness]. I also advise them on strategies to minimize abuse and stress in their live and how to lead a more productive and healthy lifestyle. It is heavily focused on self-discipline and 'doing the right thing' or righteousness.
The manual has a launchpad section for every major section of text that gives kids activities to do or questions to answer to stimulate thinking and test out what is said in manual - or even to challenge what is stated in manual. It is the ideal springboard for parents to discuss sensitive issues like drug use, sex, career, workplace, and family relationships. And since the manual is about the adult world of drugs - into which the kids are emerging - it is not necessarily a forum for adults to lecture children since their drug dependencies and abusive behaviors will be open for discussion as much as that of their children.
A lot of people can state that much of the text is a 'matter of opinion' but in my opinion you can't base a 'difference of opinion' on lies. I've recently made an inquiry about the DEA's website where I ask which legal drugs were grandfathered into the Controlled Substances Act - or which legal drugs were actually tested and if the DEA made even a token attempt to allow peer review for the testing that is implied in the Controlled Substances Act on their website. I don't expect an answer because I know for a fact that the War on Drugs can't stand up to the most minimal of scientific scrutiny.
You can tell your 'drug test everyone' host that he is more than welcome to visit Benton County Oregon to defend the War on Drugs. Before he accepts the challenge I would like him to give one good reason for continuing this absurd policy...... without lying or deliberately misleading onlookers.
BTW, any drug abuse and dependency curriculum would have to tell students about the limitations of drug use and the problems with over reliance and dependency - the main one being not taking other measures to deal with the problem. Then you tell them that people will lie and mislead them to get them to buy - or not buy - certain drugs. Since the bread and butter of drug company profits is promoting dependency there is no interest in putting such a curriculum into our schools.