Pubdate: Wed, 16 Apr 2003
Source: Daily Helmsman, The (TN Edu)
Copyright: 2003 Daily Helmsman
Contact:  http://www.dailyhelmsman.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2828
Author:  Adam Siders
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/campaign.htm (ONDCP Media Campaign)

PERSONA OF MARIJUANA DISTORTED IN AMERICA

Last night while flipping through the channels, searching hopelessly for 
quality entertainment, I stumbled across a government subsidized 
anti-marijuana commercial.

A knot formed in my stomach and I was instantly sickened as I realized the 
creators of the commercial were equating using marijuana with supporting 
terrorism.

I quickly flipped the channel back to CNN and caught the end of an Ari 
Fleischer press conference. The administration's spokesman was being 
questioned about North Korea's weapons proliferation program.

But images of the previous commercial continued to reverberate in my mind. 
All I could think about was America's ignorance proliferation program. The 
administration's war against drugs is a politically correct label for a 
psychological war being conducted on America's youth.

In reality, prohibition of marijuana causes more problems than it solves, 
ruining thousands more lives than it saves, while restricting tax-paying 
citizens from enjoying the benefits of this plant.

I respect the constitutional rights of each citizen to choose whether or 
not to use marijuana.

The responsible use of marijuana by adults yields no societal affects that 
render a need for local, state or federal government to restrict the 
possession, use and cultivation of cannabis sativa L.

But public persona has been distorted in America, shielding the personal, 
medicinal and industrial benefits of this plant. In the rest of the world, 
public persona has shifted.

The legalization movement that has swept through Canada, most of Europe, 
and several states in America, started initially by changing public 
persona. In the world, there are two superpowers: the United States and 
public opinion.

In the United States, public opinion has been transformed gradually over 
the latter half of the twentieth century, culminating in the buy-a-sack and 
support bin Laden attitude today.

Ironically, despite America's bureaucratic halt on hemp cultivation, a 
domestic industry still exists and continues to grow. The European Union, 
the United Nations, the North American Free Trade Agreement and the General 
Agreement on Tariffs and Trade recognize industrial hemp as a commercial 
crop. In America we are sending a mixed message to our farmers: we'll 
import it, but you can't grow it.

Until public persona changes in the United States, as it has in more than 
30 nations, the atrocities will continue. Point in fact: America is a close 
second to only Russia in our rate of incarceration per 100,000. Each year, 
nearly 750,000 people are incarcerated in America for marijuana-related 
offenses alone, ruining thousands of innocent lives.

This overwhelming influx into our prison system could be easily remedied by 
legalizing marijuana. And, the widespread use of treatment alternatives to 
jail sentences for convicted drug addicts would be the first victorious 
battle in a war against drugs that up until now, only exists in the minds 
of freedom-lovers worldwide.
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MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager