Pubdate: Thu, 01 May 2003 Source: Westender (Vancouver, CN BC) Copyright: 2003 WestEnder Contact: http://www.westender.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1243 Author: Frank G. Sterle, Jr. DECRIMINALIZING POT A DANGEROUS MOVE Abolishing prohibition against marijuana consumption is legitimizing its consumption and implying that it's harmless ("Drug prohibition never the answer," Letters, April 17-24 issue). As a former pot-consumer myself, I, along with most of my former pot-consumption peers who I've bumped into these last half-dozen years, can attest to the permanent damage marijuana can cause to the body and mind. Scientific proof of such damage? For one, there are the startling facts published in an article last Sept. 17, in London's Guardian newspaper; it was authored by professor of psychiatry at the Institute of Psychiatry and hospital consultant, Robin Murray: "In the mid-'90s, a Dutch psychiatrist named Don Lintzen, from the University Clinic in Amsterdam, noted that people with schizophrenia who consumed a lot of cannabis had a much worse outcome than those who didn't. This was confirmed by other studies, including a four-year follow-up at the Maudsley Hospital. Those who continued to smoke cannabis were three times more likely to develop a chronic illness than those who did not consume..." Murray learned. "Why does cannabis exacerbate psychosis? In schizophrenia, the hallucinations result from an excess of a brain chemical called dopamine. All of the drugs that cause psychosis--amphetamines, cocaine and cannabis--increase the release of dopamine in the brain. In this way, they are distinct from illicit drugs such as heroin or morphine, which do not make psychosis worse." Frank G. Sterle, Jr. , White Rock - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens