Pubdate: Sun, 13 Aug 2000 Source: Toronto Sun (CN ON) Copyright: 2000, Canoe Limited Partnership. Contact: 333 King St. E., Toronto, Ontario M5A 3X5 Canada Fax: (416) 947-3228 Website: http://www.canoe.ca/TorontoSun/ Forum: http://www.canoe.ca/Chat/newsgroups.html Author: Linda Williamson REEFER MADNESS? Cannabis crusaders try to blow smoke on some of the points in last week's column Well, I'll say this for marijuana smokers, they're able to react faster and more forcefully than I gave them credit for. After last week's column expressing my misgivings over decriminalization and possible legalization of pot, I've been crushed, rolled, twisted and set on fire (metaphorically of course) by cannabis crusaders. To all those folks, may I say, respectfully: chill. Of course, many were incredulous over my statement that pot today has been found to be up to 2,500 times more potent than it used to be. They were right. The number, which came from one of our sister papers, isn't correct. The reference is from an RCMP document entitled "Taking a Balanced Approach: Canada's Drug Policy from the National Police Perspective," by: C/Supt. Tim Quigley of the Mounties' Drug Enforcement Branch. Here's what it said: "The type of marijuana ... baby boomers may have used back in the 1960s is not the same type of marijuana that is smoked today by our youth. Marijuana potency levels have dramatically increased. This new marijuana is now, on average, up to 700% stronger. This does not include the omnipotent sensimilla brand of marijuana ... or hashish oil, which on average, is up to 2,500% stronger than the 1960s marijuana cigarette." So you see, it's 2,500%, not 2,500 times, and he's talking hash oil vs. pot. Mea culpa. However, Quigley goes on to say: "The concern lies in the fact that parents are generally unaware of marijuana's increasing potency, and thus, do not assess their child's potential marijuana use given the current situation .... It is our belief that a drug is a drug. For example, we know that one dose of high-potency marijuana is equivalent to one dose of LSD." Now, I can already hear the response to this - it's a police document, after all. Cops can't possibly have a "balanced approach," now, can they? Hey, tell it to the RCMP. I have other things to deal with. Like, for instance, all those who took issue with my lighthearted observations about what I dislike about the pot-smoking experience. For instance, the way time stretches out and you start giggling about something that was said 10 minutes ago. "What evidence do you have of this 10-minute delay in reaction time?" one writer demanded. Oh, lighten up. Several writers hotly denied my saying some pot is practically hallucinogenic (see LSD comparison above). Yet one sent me an essay from the late scientist (and pot advocate) Carl Sagan, who enthused that it helped him see "pictures on the inside of my eyelids" back in the '60s. Others dismissed my call for more studies to determine the long-term effects of pot use and exactly how much it impairs one's ability to, say, drive a car. The issue has been studied to death, and no serious effects have been found, they said. (Though a number of writers cited several studies that concluded just the opposite.) That's all well and good, but I was thinking of an authoritative Canadian study from which we could develop standards and a breathalyzer-style test for marijuana impairment. If there's no such impairment (though most of my e-mailers conceded they, personally, wouldn't drive stoned, duh!), what's everyone so defensive about? Hey, tobacco and booze have been studied to death, too. Yet there are still folks out there who swear smoking cigarettes isn't harmful either. And speaking of booze, many writers were insulted that I would personally prefer relaxing with a glass of wine to getting stoned, since, with today's high-potency pot, it's difficult to control just how whacked out you're going to get. In some folks' books, that makes me no better than an alcoholic, even though I acknowledged the misery demon drink can cause. One correspondent, however, gently suggested that "inexperienced pot users tend to overdo it" and practice makes perfect. Perhaps, but I'm still not a big fan of smoking anything - and, I note, most of the known health risks with pot come from combustion, not the mind-altering cannibinoids. This same person also summarized the lengthy reasons of Ontario Justice John McCart in a 1997 medical marijuana case, who concluded, among other things, that marijuana was "relatively harmless" compared to booze, tobacco and other drugs; there's no evidence of it causing irreversible physical or mental damage; that it "would not be prudent" to drive a car while stoned; that pot doesn't "induce psychoses," is not addictive and does not lead users to crime or harder drugs. That judge, in turn, cited the concern of B.C. Justice Francis Howard, who lamented the "lack of open communication between young persons and their elders" about their use of pot and other drugs, along with the risk that young pot users "will be associating with actual criminals and hard drug users who are the primary suppliers of the drug" and "the lack of governmental control over the quality of the drug." Well, I'd agree with both judges' observations entirely. But obviously they're not advocating a marijuana free-for-all - they're saying we need more study and discussion on how to control and regulate it. I welcome the debate. To that end, while I appreciate the advice, I do hope the level of discourse rises above the note I got from a stoner who instructed me to "remove the pickle." Peace, everyone. - --- MAP posted-by: John Chase