Pubdate: Sat, 09 Jun 2001 Source: Daily Star (NY) Copyright: 2001 The Daily Star Contact: http://www.thedailystar.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/557 Author: Cary Brunswick JUST SAYING 'NO' MIGHT BE INVITATION TO SAY 'YES' The Supreme Court decided last month that a federal law classifying marijuana as illegal includes no exception for medical uses. Such a shortsighted decision is like writing a prescription for Acapulco Gold for people who likely never would have wanted the herb for their ailments. One state after another has been clearing the way for medical marijuana, including Nevada just this week. In addition, voters in Arizona, Alaska, California, Colorado, Maine, Oregon and Washington have approved ballot initiatives allowing it. In Hawaii, the legislature passed a similar law and the governor signed it last year. They are the exceptions and likely will face battles with the feds when following through with legalized medicinal pot. It seems we've never been able to learn that the more you try to make something off-limits, the more people will want to transgress those limits to get at it. We are so hung-up about making things taboo, you'd think there was a ban on taboos. Look at all the government legislation and penal laws that try to regulate the way people behave "for their own good." Add to this the unwritten norms of taste we've set up for ourselves, and it's easy to understand why we think almost everybody is "bad" to some extent. Our attitudes about marijuana, especially, are ridiculous and obsolete. Since the 1960s, it seems like just about everybody "inhales" while in college without turning into the green psychopaths that the anti-pot propaganda said they would. Federal law didn't even make marijuana illegal until 1937; a few states were earlier and the others followed suit. The ban was fallout from the "Prohibition" on alcohol that lasted from 1920 to 1933. The booze taboo made pot more popular and so the temperance people started all sorts of stories about how marijuana made people crazy. The fact is that, even with alcohol legal again, marijuana use has increased since it was made illegal. All the evidence, whether scientific or anecdotal, shows it is erroneous to group pot with real illegal drugs such as cocaine and heroin, or with regulated drugs such as amphetamines and barbiturates. In fact, many experts and lay people alike will testify that marijuana is not nearly as harmful to users or those around them as alcohol or tobacco. (Some states tried banning tobacco in the late 19th century, but the taboo made it too popular so the bans were scrapped.) If marijuana can help a person's glaucoma, or relieve the sickness from chemotherapy, why not let people have the option? Human societies have been clear: Behavior that harms other people, or has a great potential to do so, should be criminal and illegal. But rules that govern personal habits or lifestyles that don't infringe on others should be much less invasive. The laws regulating alcoholic beverages are another example debated frequently these days. The latest national criminals are the president's daughters, Jenna and Barbara Bush, each 19, who have been charged with crimes associated with underage drinking. They were victimized by the tougher laws pushed by their father when he was governor of Texas. While the media politely backed off on the story as demanded by the White House, the real issue is that the Bush teen-agers are not really criminals. Our puritanical laws on the drinking age are making them look that way. Two decades ago Jenna and Barbara Bush would have been able to have a margarita with their Mexican dinner without being arrested. Most states, including New York, had rational drinking ages of 18 or 19 until the Reagan administration threatened to cut off federal highway money if they didn't up the age to 21. Of course, the argument about too many young people drinking and driving was offered. The fact remains, however, that passing a law was not going to stop the behavior (it didn't) - it was just going to turn our teen-agers into lawbreakers and make a mockery of the law. Each year hundreds of local residents are arrested on underage-drinking and marijuana-possession infractions. Ask 19- or 20-year-old young adults if they believe they are criminals for drinking a beer or smoking a joint. They'll laugh. No, instead they probably are going to say we in America are the "Taliban" of substance-abuse policy. We could change course, however. Just think, if we were to make marijuana use legal and restore a sane drinking age, it just might take some of the fun out of practicing the illicit behavior. As much as we like creating taboos, we like breaking them even more. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake