Pubdate: Sun, 02 Apr 2000 Source: Michigan Daily (MI) Copyright: 2000 The Michigan Daily Contact: 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109-1327 Website: http://www.michigandaily.com/ LEGALIZE IT Hash Bash Should Focus On Legalization This Saturday, the air around Central Campus will take on a very distinctive odor as thousands of people, students and non-students alike, gather on the Diag to roll a joint in honor of the annual Hash Bash. A tradition in Ann Arbor since 1972, Hash Bash was born not only as an excuse to smoke pot but as a way to protest the criminalization of marijuana. Indeed, the protest is the most important aspect of the event. Based on the existing evidence, there is no good reason for marijuana to be illegal. The dangers posed by smoking marijuana pale in comparison to those posed by the use of many other legal substances. Unlike nicotine, alcohol, and even caffeine, marijuana has never been proven to be physically addictive, nor has there ever been a recorded case of a fatal overdose. Marijuana's vaunted status as a "gateway drug," which introduces users to more dangerous substances such as heroin, cocaine and LSD, is based on similarly dubious statistics. In general, the effects of marijuana use are comparable to those of alcohol, yet alcohol is legal while marijuana is not. Another reason to legalize marijuana is its medicinal value. It has been used to relieve the symptoms of glaucoma, multiple sclerosis, epilepsy, paraplegia and quadriplegia, as well as to reduce nausea in cancer and AIDS patients. However, most states ban the drug even for medicinal use. This punishes the sick for therapeutic use of a substance that should not be illegal in the first place. Many of the legitimate dangers caused by marijuana use would be alleviated were the substance legal. For instance, once legal and regulated, it would be far less likely that people would smoke marijuana laced with more dangerous substances. Legalization of marijuana would also remove the social problems associated with its use. It would free space in the already overcrowded prisons, as many marijuana offenders receive unduly stiff sentences even for possession. Indeed, possession arrests count for approximately 85 percent of marijuana-related arrests. As many of these offenders are no doubt otherwise law-abiding, it is a waste of taxpayers' money and a misguided action on the part of the criminal justice system to punish marijuana users so harshly. It is for reasons such as these that Hash Bash was formed - to support the decriminalization of a relatively innocuous drug. The key issue here is not merely marijuana but freedom of choice: The right to put anything one wants into one's body. In recent years, Hash Bash has become something of a commercial event, as people in and around Ann Arbor think of it primarily as a pot-smoking party. But the event should not be as much about getting stoned as it is about standing up for personal rights. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake