Pubdate: Mon, 15 Sep 2003 Source: Tuscaloosa News, The (AL) Copyright: 2003 The Tuscaloosa News Contact: http://www.tuscaloosanews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1665 Author: Markeshia Ricks Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization) UA STUDENTS HEAR ARGUMENTS FOR, AGAINST LEGALIZING MARIJUANA TUSCALOOSA - Listening to Bob Marley sing the lyrics "legalize it, I'll advertise it" may have put some of the more than 700 University of Alabama students gathered at the Ferguson Center plaza Wednesday evening in the mood for herbal refreshment. But the only smoke being blown on a balmy weeknight came from tobacco cigarettes as students heard from two speakers from opposite ends of the marijuana legalization debate in a forum called "Heads vs. Feds." The event, which featured Steven Hager, editor-in-chief of High Times magazine, and Robert Stutman, former head of the New York office of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration, was sponsored by UA's University Programs. UA junior Andrea Holder said she came to hear what both speakers had to say, but she also was hoping to see some sparks fly. "I thought it would be interesting to hear the two different perspectives, but I also thought it would be a little entertaining to have them go at it," she said. Holder, a native of Panama, said she is on the fence about whether marijuana should be legalized because she's not sure Americans are ready for the responsibility. "I don't think people need anything more to justify reckless behavior," she said. "Sure, people argue that it's worked in Amsterdam, but American culture is different. I don't know if Americans are responsible enough to handle it." Holder appeared to hold the minority opinion in the crowd as students hooted and cheered for "head" defender Steven Hager, the first to speak. Hager told students that marijuana was "good medicine" and proceeded to paint a picture of an America sustained by hemp that was far less polluted, healthier and had fewer prisons, for which he received thunderous applause. "When I was in high school our country was famous for its schools," he said. "But the No. 1 growth industry in the U.S. today is prisons. I believe that people have the right to cultivate their own medicine. Cannabis is a lot safer than many legal drugs like Paxil." Despite Hager's popularity with the masses, Robert Stutman came out swinging with the facts about why marijuana should not be legalized. Stutman said that most of those who claim they smoke marijuana for medicinal and religious reasons are hiding behind their desire to smoke. "The issue has nothing to do with those things," he said. "The issue is --I want to smoke when I want to get high off grass and I should be able to do it when I want to.' There is not one recognized medical group in the U.S. that would endorse smoking pot." Stutman said while some research has shown that ingredients in marijuana may have medical value, "smoking pot will never be good for you and any doctor who tells you that it is, is a fool." He cited the high levels of cancer-causing materials that make marijuana joints three to five times more cancerous than the average cigarette. Hager and Stutman agreed that putting people in prison for drug use was bad policy, however. Eager students like UA senior Janette Durn lined up to ask questions of the two speakers. Durn said she believes there was such a strong interest among students because there are legal substances like alcohol that have been proven to be dangerous, but have not been criminalized like marijuana. "I think marijuana should be decriminalized and people possibly fined for possession instead of put in prison," she said. "Money that's being put into the prison system could be used on education. The money from the fines could be used to pay teachers salaries. There are just better things that could be done." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin