Pubdate: Mon, 24 Feb 2003 Source: Duluth News-Tribune (MN) Copyright: 2003 Duluth News-Tribune Contact: http://www.duluthsuperior.com/mld/duluthtribune/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/553 Author: Manon G. McKinnon Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis) PRO AND CON: SHOULD CONGRESS MAKE USING MARIJUANA LEGAL? (CON) The Other Perspective In his January State of the Union address, President Bush said, "Another cause of hopelessness is addiction to drugs. Addiction crowds out friendship, ambition, moral conviction and reduces all the richness of life to a single destructive desire." He asked for $600 million more to treat another 300,000 addicts. Only a week earlier, the Journal of the American Medical Association reported a study confirming the gateway hypothesis that youthful use of marijuana leads to later use of cocaine, heroin and other drugs -- and to addiction. The president is hoping to save 300,000 of those current and future addicts before they are lost for good. Perhaps "destructive desire" and gateway risk were on the minds of voters last November as they dealt a significant setback to state initiatives legalizing pot. In Ohio, Arizona, Nevada and South Dakota, voters overwhelmingly rejected the opportunity to oppose the drug war instead of the drugs. This is quite a shift from the years between 1996 and 2000 in which the proponents of drug legalization marched from victory to victory until, by the end of 2000, eight states had approved the smoking of marijuana as medicine and the weakening of antidrug laws. Well-funded legalizers crafted a message of compassion for the sick and wrongly incarcerated, and the voters bought it. Based on that background, many expected more drug approval from the states targeted in 2002. Time magazine extolled "The New Politics of Pot," and mused "Can it go legit? How the people who brought you medical marijuana have set their sights on lifting the ban for everyone." This time it didn't work. The pro-drug initiatives went down by 61 percent in Nevada; by 67 percent in Ohio; by 57 percent in Arizona; and by 63 percent in South Dakota. In Michigan and Florida, pro-drug initiatives were beaten back before making it to the ballot. What turned the tide? Possibly it was that very recognition of deceit in the medical claims for smoked marijuana and the fiction that rapists and murders are going free while police fill jails with "nonviolent marijuana users." Perhaps voters simply realized that they had been lied to, and that legalization would only spread more drug misery. The voters were right. A joint of today's super-strength marijuana is not medicine -- and it is not innocent fun. Marijuana enfeebles the immune system; it produces five times the lung damage of tobacco; it assaults the brain and nervous system in the same way as heroin or cocaine, priming the brain for serious addiction. Pot erodes memory and learning. It impairs the ability to judge and react. Marijuana accounted for 110,512 emergency room episodes in 2001. The prospect of a drugged citizenry, moreover, does not bode well for a free society. The war on drugs is not lost. A tough and integrated drug strategy based on interdiction, treatment, prevention and law enforcement cut drug use by half - -- and by up to 81 percent among teens -- during the 1980s. Those strategies are being applied today and teen drug use, following a 1990s increase, is again headed down. Legalizing drugs means more drugs and more drug addicts for whom, said the president, "the fight against drugs is a fight for their own lives." To be sure, "destructive desire" is not something to enshrine into law. MANON G. McKINNON is a nationally distributed independent journalist who specializes in reporting and commentary about illegal drugs. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh