Pubdate: Mon, 04 Aug 2003 Source: The Patriot Ledger (MA) Copyright: 2003 The Patriot Ledger Contact: http://ledger.southofboston.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1619 Author: Lea Palleria Cox Note: Lea Palleria Coz is President of Concerned Citizens for Drug Prevention, Inc., and a Massachusetts Delegate, Drug Watch International READER'S VIEW: REGARDING THE DANGERS OF MARIJUANA USE Jeanne Black-Ferguson disagrees with reputable physicians on the dangers of marijuana as quoted and documented by Mary Smith (Ledger, July 7). Perhaps Black-Ferguson is not aware that marijuana, the weed, is a Schedule I drug at the federal level, meaning it has high potential for abuse, no currently acceptable medical use and lacks safety and efficacy. As one of the reasons for supporting decriminalization, Black-Ferguson states: ' '... many hundreds of thousands of our citizens (are) imprisoned for simple possession of the plant ..." an oft-quoted misrepresentation not borne out by fact. One of the many inmates to whom she refers, interviewed in an article, ' ' Chasing the demons of drugs," (Ledger, June 14), confirmed that approximately ' ' 90 percent of the people locked in jails and prisons are there because of addiction of drugs." The inmate further states: ' 'My crime was aggravated robbery, but my motive was dope." ' 'I became addicted from the very first hit I took off the joint being passed around among my peers ..." ' 'I'm here with countless other good men and women ." The other ' 'good men and women" to whom he refers, like himself, might have been ' 'good" at one time, but they are people who allowed drugs to ruin their lives, sending them down the path of crime. He blames marijuana for his misfortune and rightfully so. Simply put, people are in jail for the crimes they commit - not for ' 'simple possession" as the pro-drug movement would have us believe and as stated by Black-Ferguson. It would seem to me that making marijuana more available and legal would only increase the prison population and ruin more lives and families. If our legislators would take the drug problem more seriously and get the truth out to our young people about the dangers of marijuana, we could eliminate the drug problem, empty our jails, live in a safer society and perhaps have money left over to continue anti-drug education and all the ' 'good men and women" who are in jail for drug-induced crime would not be there. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart