Pubdate: Wed, 29 May 2002 Source: Philadelphia Weekly (PA) Copyright: 2002 Philadelphia Weekly Contact: http://www.phillyweekly.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1091 Author: Liz Spikol SMASHED OR STONED? Booze Is More Destructive Than Pot -- But Not By Much Here's something I've never understood: If alcohol is legal, why not pot? It seems inconsistent. Marijuana is less damaging than alcohol, isn't it? That's what I always thought, anyway, as did my pot-smoking friends. I don't smoke pot or drink--never much liked either one--so I don't have any particular ax to grind. But I will admit that I've always felt alcohol was far more pernicious. And according to the U.S. Dept. of Health and Human Services, there are more than 48 million Americans who use alcohol one or more days each week, which is two and a half times the number of Americans who used marijuana once in 1999. If marijuana is used less frequently, is that because it's less addictive or because it's illegal? It's almost impossible to tell. Here's a comparison of alcohol and marijuana on several key issues complete with scorecard*. Keep in mind that there is less research available about pot. After you read this, you might want them both to be illegal. Criminalization: Criminalization of alcohol didn't work. The 18th Amendment was passed in 1919, supposedly to solve problems associated with drunkenness, such as disorderly conduct. But after the first couple years of relative law abiding, it soon became clear that the chaos surrounding alcohol's illegality--organized crime, bootleggers, grown men drinking out of teacups--wasn't serving the country's best interests. In 1933 Prohibition was repealed, and it's been all disorderly-downhill from there. Criminalization of marijuana is likewise characterized by failure: drug deals gone bad, pot laced with PCP, costly incarcerations and trials. If walking down the ganja-soaked streets of Philadelphia is any indication, criminalization and enforcement aren't very effective. And if pot were decriminalized, like alcohol, it could be monitored and regulated. On the other hand, monitoring alcohol intake has only given us more evidence against it. Alcohol being legal scores 3 while pot being illegal scores 3. Addiction: In the past decade, researchers have come to understand alcohol dependence as a disease that is inherited. This is not the case with marijuana, which has not been proven to be physically addictive. It is, though, similar to alcohol in that its psychological dependence is characterized by uncontrollable cravings and a build-up of physical tolerance. Bottom line: While addiction to alcohol is a disease and has greater societal implications, dependence on marijuana doesn't have much to recommend it. Alcohol: 1. Marijuana: 4. Health risks: When it comes to prolonged and excessive use, pick your poison. Alcohol has been linked to liver and heart disease, ulcers, hepatitis, cancers and physical dependence. Pot, like tobacco, can lead to mouth, throat and lung cancers as well as short-term memory loss, impaired fertility and chronic, decreased motivation. Abuse of both can cause depression, paranoia and problems with friends and family, and at the workplace. Alcohol: 1. Marijuana: 1. Fatalities: The U.S. Department of Health reports that alcohol-related deaths total 100,000 annually from all causes, including traffic accidents, liver disease, related violence and falls. They put marijuana and other illegal drug-related fatalities at under 10,000 a year. This is especially clear when looking at the problem of drinking on college campuses, where 1,400 college students between the ages of 18 and 24 die each year from alcohol-related injuries. Alcohol: 1. Marijuana: 2. Speaking of college students ... Bingeing: Have you ever heard of binge toking? It's simply not an issue. But binge drinking is a serious problem on college campuses. In 2001, the Harvard School of Public Health's College Alcohol Study found that 44 percent of college students were binge drinkers. Binge drinking also factors heavily in sexual assault, rape and unsafe sex. The study determined that more than 70,000 students between the ages of 18 and 24 were victims of alcohol-related sexual assault or date rape and more than 100,000 students between the ages of 18 and 24 had been too intoxicated to know if they consented to having sex. As far as pot goes, urine tests of sexual assault victims who only had one drug in their systems (as opposed to a mix of alcohol and Ecstasy, for instance) showed alcohol was present in 69 percent of cases while marijuana was present in 18 percent. Bottom line on college campuses: Alcohol: 1. Marijuana: 3. Impaired driving: The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration says 40 percent of fatal traffic accidents involve alcohol. In 2000, there was one alcohol-related fatality every 32 minutes and one injury every two minutes. Three of every 10 Americans will be involved in an alcohol-related crash in their lifetimes. The numbers for marijuana--again, not as readily available--don't begin to equal the severity of alcohol. After all, who's ever heard of Mothers Against Stoned Driving? But let's be clear: Though not as statistically perilous, using marijuana when driving is a huge risk because it triggers impaired judgement and slow reaction time, among other things. Plus, teens are more likely to smoke pot while driving than to drink alcohol. Alcohol: 1. Marijuana: 2. Violent crime: Bureau of Justice statistics for 1998 show that nearly four in 10 violent crimes include the use of alcohol. It's easy to picture an aggressive, violent drunk--most domestic abuse cases involve alcohol--but harder to imagine a pot-addled fellow beating someone to a pulp. As Judy Mann wrote in the Washington Post last year, "Marijuana itself does not induce violence. People don't smoke a joint and decide to shoot somebody. What produces the violence associated with marijuana is that it is illegal. The same dynamic caused the murderous Capone-style violence during Prohibition. And once Prohibition was repealed, the violence associated with the bootleg trade vanished, although the gangsters that it spawned did not. ... We must make the distinction between violence associated with a drug and violence associated with the drug trade." Okay, we will: Alcohol: 2. Marijuana: 4. Final averages: Alcohol: 1.4 Marijuana: 2.7 * Scores based on a 1-5 scale, 1 being just awful and 5 being relatively benign." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens