Pubdate: Fri, 10 Mar 2000 Source: Daily Telegraph (UK) Copyright: 2000 Telegraph Group Limited Contact: (Sunday http://www.telegraph.co.uk/ Author: Robert Sharpe DANGERS CAUSED BY DRUGS LAWS SIR - Prof Griffith Edwards, the former head of the National Addiction Centre, is confused if he thinks that the principal argument for cannabis legalisation is that the plant is relatively harmless (Science, March 8). Like any drug, cannabis can be harmful if abused. I doubt that anyone in the drug policy reform movement will deny that. It is not the effects of cannabis that necessitate legalisation, but rather the effects of drug laws. In the United States, children have an easier time buying cannabis than beer. While an American liquor store will refuse to sell alcohol to a minor to avoid losing its licence, a drug dealer will sell to anyone. More disturbing is the manner in which cannabis users come into contact with pushers of harder drugs. The black market status of cannabis puts its distribution in the hands of organised crime. In effect, drug laws finance organised crime which, in turn, fuels violence and corruption. America's experience with alcohol prohibition confirms that legalisation will not only eliminate drug law-related violence, but also make it significantly harder for children to purchase drugs. Finally, we have the effects of drug laws on the individual. A heavy cannabis smoker may risk bronchitis but the health effects of bronchitis are inconsequential compared with the long-term effects of prison stays and criminal records. The government does not actively try and destroy the lives of alcoholics. I fail to see why cannabis smokers should be singled out for punishment. Robert Sharpe, Students for a Sensible Drug Policy, George Washington University, Washington - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk