Pubdate: Thu, 03 Jul 2003 Source: Eye Magazine (CN ON) Copyright: 2003 Eye Communications Ltd. Contact: http://www.eye.net/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/147 Author: David Silverberg HIGH TIME FOR THIS ARGUMENT Saying Yes: in Defense of Drug Use Those friends of ours who drink beer by the gallons but tsk-tsk any mention of drugs will change their tune after reading the latest indictment on the US drug war Saying Yes: In Defense of Drug Use. Jacob Sullum argues for illegal drugs to be shelved in the same category as alcohol, where its users can be regarded as responsible citizens rather than demonized addicts. Sullum, who previously blasted "health Nazis" in For Your Own Good: The Anti-Smoking Crusade and the Tyranny of Public Health, has a rep for rattling the conservative cage. His latest romp through drug policy digs into age-old research, anonymous interviews and those classic anti-drug ads. Sullum structures his book cleverly: after detailing alcohol's history in its abstinence and moderation stages, he explores individual misconceptions that the drug war pushes on an unknowing public. Drug-induced madness, sloth, lust, violence and limb-shaking addiction get torn to shreds under Sullum's critical knife. Of particular interest is his charge that marijuana as a gateway drug is illogical dot-connecting. "One could observe similar correlations between recreational activities. People who go bungee jumping are probably more likely to try skydiving than people who don't go bungee jumping." Sullum's only faults, though, are his reliance on stats and his tone. His voice resembles a kid whining for his toys and the pace slows during lengthy told-you-so surveys that support his arguments on drug abuse or MDMA toxicity, for instance. But the numbers do strengthen the theoretical threads and Sullum once again fires pot shots at the suits who are supposedly looking out for our health. In Saying Yes, he offers compelling evidence on how drug prohibition is only hurting body and soul by forcing addicts to associate with sketchy dealers and pushing casual users into pariah territory. He also has a message that could headline any Canadian drug reform bill: drug use is not the end of the world. - --- MAP posted-by: Alex