Mr LAMING (Bowman) (13:58): Last week the Workplace Drug Testing Association conducted random illicit drug testing in this building. They did a great job. I tell you what—a few more swabs should be done on the other side! But it was done randomly on this side, because we know that, if it's good enough to drug-test the community, it's good enough to drug-test this building. It's a workplace here, just like every other workplace, and we do not set ourselves above those who receive welfare around the country. If we're going to drug-test them, we can drug-test politicians. We've done it. The ball is in their court. But there's another area of testing I'm not so bullish about: pill testing at music festivals. That's right: taking cowboy machinery, a tent and a white jacket and testing illicit drugs at music festivals. That's just plain dumb. That will do more damage than it would do to help. Although they're very well-meaning clinicians, the FTIR machine they use is just cowboy biochemistry. It scrapes the edge of the pill but doesn't tell you the dose. We know, from all the studies done, that dosage kills. Multidosing, mixing and polypharmacy is what kills. If you can't tell the dose of a pill, you might as well not give the information. You should be counselling and giving them a burger voucher. But don't use junk biochemistry and give a false sense of security. We don't want those dirty tabs going back out into the music festival and being onsold. That is simply irresponsible. There are too many young Australians in body bags. Telling people a drug is clean is false information, and you're heading for a massive multimillion-dollar lawsuit. The SPEAKER: In accordance with standing order 43, the time for members' statements has concluded.