Pubdate: Sat, 17 May 2003 Source: Burnaby Now, The (CN BC) Copyright: 2003 Lower Mainland Publishing Group Inc. Contact: http://www.burnabynow.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1592 Author: Frank G. Sterle, Jr. POT CAN BE HARMFUL Editor: By promoting marijuana decriminalization or legalization, pro-pot activists are basically legitimizing its consumption and implying that it's basically harmless. 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 that marjiuana can cause to the consumer's body and mind. In addition, the is [sic] a growing body of 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 a professor of psychiatry at the Institute of Psychiatry and a hospital consultant, Robin Murray, who said in the article: "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 followup 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 the drug," 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 brainn. In this way, they are distinct from illiciet drugs such as heroin or morphine, which do not make psychosis worse." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom