Pubdate: Thu, 08 May 2003 Source: Washington Dispatch Copyright: 2003, Washington Dispatch Contact: http://www.washingtondispatch.com/index.shtml Author: Steve Chapman Cited: National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws http://www.norml.org Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/walters.htm (Walters, John) Note: MAP posted as an exception to MAP's web only source policies. The author is a columnist and editorial writer for the Chicago Tribune. FOR SENSIBLE MARIJUANA POLICY, GO NORTH Among American officeholders, there are two points of view about the drug war. Some are for it, while others are really, really for it. In Canada, though, Prime Minister Jean Chretien has said something no American politician would ever say: Marijuana users should no longer be treated like criminals. Given Canada's opposition to American policy on Iraq, you may wonder why those puzzling people up north are so out of step on everything. Maybe there's a reason they put the loon on their coins. Actually, the drug war has some things in common with the Iraq war: The United States has found itself without many allies, facing vocal disagreement in many countries. The big difference is that we don't have a prayer of winning the war against drugs. The Bush administration is clearly unhappy about the Canadians' habit of thinking for themselves. John Walters, director of the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy, expressed deep disappointment: "You expect your friends to stop the movement of poison to your neighborhood." He may be forgetting that the Canadian government controls only its own neighborhood - -- unlike the U.S. government, which aspires to rule a lot of the world beyond its borders. U.S. Ambassador Paul Cellucci warned that decriminalization might force American customs agents to spend more time checking out Canadians entering the U.S. Well, of course. I mean, our law enforcement officers have never had to worry about people smuggling pot into the country before, have they? But decriminalization in Canada wouldn't have much effect on drug use in America. How do I know? Because decriminalization in America hasn't had much effect on drug use in America. Yes, it has been tried here -- and not, as you might expect, in just a few locales that are still stuck in the '60s. According to The National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws, 13 states no longer make a habit of putting people in jail for smoking a joint, including such funky places as Nebraska and Mississippi. What happens when a state decriminalizes marijuana? People immediately seize the opportunity to go on behaving exactly as they had behaved before. A 1999 study commissioned by the National Academy of Sciences found that marijuana use in states that relaxed their laws was no different from states that didn't. The Netherlands has gone further still. Though cannabis is technically against the law, the government allows it to be openly sold and consumed. In their 2001 book "Drug War Heresies," Robert MacCoun of the University of California at Berkeley and Peter Reuter of the University of Maryland noted that by effectively legalizing pot, "the Dutch have significantly reduced the monetary and human costs of incarcerating cannabis offenders with no apparent effects on levels of use." If you looked at just the comparative popularity of marijuana, you might assume we were the ones with the permissive laws. Dutch teenagers are less likely to smoke pot than American kids. In fact, a survey of teens in 30 European countries found that all of them have lower rates of cannabis use than we do. Conservatives often warn about the unintended consequences of liberal schemes, but they haven't noticed that our pot laws seem to be fostering drug use instead of preventing it. Maybe the Canadians understand that. Or maybe they're just quicker to recognize the stupidity of giving someone a criminal record for doing something that an awful lot of people have done without hurting anyone else. Nearly 80 million Americans have tried marijuana -- including the last president of the United States and, apparently, the current one, who doesn't deny youthful drug use. Only the unlucky ones get collared. But their numbers are still pretty big. More than 600,000 people are arrested each year in this country for possession of small amounts of cannabis. Arresting people to protect them from the effects of marijuana is like imprisoning William Bennett to keep him from squandering money on the slots. For that matter, the dangers of pot are mostly imaginary. The respected medical journal The Lancet concluded a few years ago, "The smoking of cannabis, even long-term, is not harmful to health." Not all experts are quite so sanguine, especially when adolescents are involved, but the health hazards of getting arrested are clearly much greater than the health hazards of getting high. Everyone knows that marijuana is not a menace to public health or morals. The marvel is not that Canadians may finally act on that knowledge, but that Americans still tolerate the waste of police time and tax money arresting people for an innocent vice. What are we smoking? - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk