Pubdate: Thu, 31 Oct 2002 Source: Las Vegas Mercury (NV) Copyright: 2002 Las Vegas Mercury Contact: http://www.lasvegasmercury.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2595 Author: Erin Breen Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?162 (Nevadans for Responsible Law Enforcement) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?163 (Question 9 NV) NOTES ON THE VOTE I just read your picks for ballot questions and I have to comment on your choice for Question 9. I think that you must realize how bad this is for Nevada. I know that when you have a cop for a brother you have no doubt heard all of the sane reasons for not wanting to amend the Nevada Constitution to include the legalization of marijuana. My gut feeling is that you are scared that your customer wants to hear you say it's the right thing to do and you're placating them. Have you asked yourself how you'll sleep at night if it passes and you feel even remotely responsible for the carnage it will cause? Just in case you really believe the "it's no worse than alcohol" line, let's address that: Alcohol currently is responsible for 16,000 of the 41,000 fatalities on our roads annually; there is no doubt that it is a dangerous drug, and no one associated with this cause has ever said otherwise. This goes back to two wrongs don't make a right. Alcohol is a water-soluble drug. One drink leaves your body and reflexes at their original levels about four hours after you drink it (one drink equals one ounce of hard liquor, or one beer or one glass of wine). Can you have the equivalent of one drink with one marijuana cigarette? The answer is no. You can't control the level of THC or predict how many tokes it will take to equal one drink. Marijuana is fat-soluble; it does not leave your body for weeks and will impair your fine motor skills for 24 hours; some even report changes for 48 hours. Question 9 calls for adults using in the privacy of their homes, but it doesn't address how long you have to stay there before operating any machinery, especially a vehicle. Just this week a driver in Las Vegas pleaded guilty to killing Sandy Thompson while high on marijuana that he smoked the night before. He was still more than seven times the legal level of impairment. Also this week a woman in Silver Springs, Nev., pleaded guilty to driving while impaired on marijuana when she lost control of her pickup truck and rolled it, killing two small children and injuring five others. Last week in Reno, a young woman was arrested for causing a crash that killed a police officer responding to a call. She, too, was high on marijuana. I'm sure all of these drivers felt they were fine. This is a small slice of the terror on our roads that is to come if this measure passes. This is one week's worth of news in our state while marijuana is still illegal. To stoop to making it a joke by adding the "pass the Funyuns" line is truly irresponsible. As a final note, I am neither a cop nor a stuffed shirt. I'm a 40-year resident of Las Vegas. I love Nevada and want my child to be safe here. My child is currently 13 years old and she truly gets it. When asked recently why she opposed Question 9, she simply stated that "it's hard enough to say no to things that are legal that you know are wrong..." Too bad you're not as smart as she is. - --Erin Breen, Safe Community Partnership Nevadans Against Legalizing Marijuana - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens