Pubdate: Thu, 22 May 2003 Source: Stranger, The (Seattle, WA) Copyright: 2003 The Stranger Contact: http://www.thestranger.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2241 Author: Dominic Holden Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/campaign.htm (ONDCP Media Campaign) BUSTED The U.S. "Drug Czar" sent some anti-drug warriors to Seattle to talk to local reporters about the dangers of marijuana. The Stranger sent a pot-smoking, marijuana-legalization activist to the meeting. The invitation came via fax from the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP). Any newspaper that wanted to send a reporter to the May 16 briefing had to RSVP, give the name of the reporter it would be sending, and make sure the reporter brought identification. Undoubtedly, the federal drug warriors hoped for an audience comprising passive journalists who would offer no objection to the feds' drug war pabulum and who would, in turn, feed the official word to the masses. The ONDCP certainly didn't expect The Stranger to send the director of Seattle's Hempfest to its meeting last Friday afternoon. The ONDCP was created by the Executive Office of the President in 1988 with the passage of the Anti-Drug Abuse Act. According to the ONDCP's website, the agency's mission is to create federal policies, priorities, and strategies in order to curb drug use, sales, and related crime. The ONDCP can be thanked for all those recent TV ads that attempted to blame terrorism on drug users. The ONDCP spent millions of taxpayer dollars on those slickly produced ads--once upon a time, drug users had fried eggs for brains, now a single bong hit can blow up a disco in Bali--and all of that money was, like so many pot smokers, completely wasted. The nation's largest drug-policy reform organization, Drug Policy Alliance, reported last month that the ONDCP's own review of its media campaign found that the ads actually increased pot consumption among teens. The deputy director of the ONDCP's National Youth Anti-Drug Media Campaign, Robert Denniston, ran the meeting in the offices of the Greater Seattle Chamber of Commerce, 24 floors above the marijuana-saturated streets of Seattle. While Mr. Denniston seemed pleasant enough, his I-lost-touch-a-long-time-ago mullet slaughtered any youth culture credibility he might have had. So in addition to Denniston and the two other grownup panelists--Richard Ries, MD, the University of Washington's chief at the addictions division of the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, and David Stewart, PhD, an assistant professor from the university's Division of Public Behavioral Health and Justice Policy--the ONDCP invited a former teenage pot addict to share her story with the audience. In the aftermath of the ONDCP's failed pot-users-fund-terrorism campaign, the group is attempting to get its anti-drug message to young people in other ways. The ONDCP is behind a new website called Freevibe (freevibe.com) that uses sexy models, trendy graphics, and words like "lowdown" in a "desperate" attempt to "connect" with "youth." To connect with parents, the ONDCP is spending tens of millions of dollars on ads that allegedly give parents the information they need to tell if their kids are using pot. (Are your kids depressed? Are they burning incense?) But the campaign's biggest hurdle is persuading aging baby boomers to tell their children to say no to pot, a drug most of them used and weren't harmed by. To that end, the ONDCP's anti-pot propaganda paints a scary picture of the risks of modern "super pot." Unlike the pot that parents smoked in the '60s, '70s, and '80s, the pot their kids are smoking today is much more potent and thus more dangerous. That was the focus of the ONDCP's briefing this past Friday. While pot may be perceived as relatively benign by people who used it when they were kids, today's "super pot" damages the brain's development and is the gateway to harder drugs. It was "super pot," brain damage, and gateways that the ONDCP supposedly wanted to discuss with local reporters. Let's start with the super pot argument. At the meeting, Dr. Ries said that marijuana is as much as 30 times more potent today than the marijuana people smoked a generation ago. While the percentage of THC (pot's active ingredient) used to be only around one percent, some modern varieties have reached a whopping 33 percent, according to the Drug Enforcement Administration. That's laughable. If the pot from a generation ago contained an average level of THC of around one percent, then your parent's pot had THC levels akin to industrial-grade hemp. You can't get high smoking hemp, and we all know the boomers got high. While today's pot is stronger than that of a few decades ago (from about three percent up to around 10 percent in rare high-grade pot), the increase is hardly dramatic. According to a report from the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws (NORML), "studies indicate that marijuana smokers distinguish between high and low potency marijuana and moderate their use accordingly just as an alcohol consumer would drink fewer ounces of (high potency) bourbon than they would of (low potency) beer." It also should be pointed out that not one single fatal marijuana overdose has been recorded in human history. And the stronger the pot, the less you have to smoke to get the desired effect. As for the ONDCP's new effort to push the "gateway" theory, that tired old argument was soundly refuted in a study completed in December of 2002 by RAND, a nonprofit research institution created by the U.S. military. Andrew Morral, lead author of the study, stated, "We've shown that the marijuana gateway effect is not the best explanation for the link between marijuana use and the use of harder drugs.... While the gateway theory has enjoyed popular acceptance, scientists have always had their doubts. Our study shows that these doubts are justified." As for the "brain damage" contention, although some of the panelists' statements were greatly distorted and intentionally misleading, a few core elements of the message are self-evident and irrefutable, even to the avid marijuana smoker and reform activist. Marijuana use clearly reduces short-term memory recall, decreases cognitive reaction time, and makes people, well, stoned. Meaning, don't get baked before class or else you won't learn much. But no evidence of pot use inducing brain damage was presented at the meeting--because no conclusive scientific evidence actually exists. As everyone knows, one of the side effects of smoking pot can be mild paranoia. So as a regular pot user, I couldn't help but wonder what the ONDCP was really up to in Seattle. Why the hush-hush 28-city tour? Why are only reporters invited? Why aren't these meetings open to the public? Well, for that we paranoids must look closer--not at the ONDCP's public-health messages, but at its budget. This year marks the end of the National Youth Anti-Drug Media Campaign's five-year funding cycle, and the ONDCP has to justify its existence as it appeals to Congress for more funds. The ONDCP figures that if its nationwide tour can generate some positive coverage in papers across the country, Congress just might toss it another few hundred million dollars. In fact, the strategy may already be paying off. At the same time the ONDCP was whispering into the ears of Seattle reporters, Congress was taking the first steps toward renewing the organization's funding. On Friday, May 16, the House Subcommittee on Criminal Justice, Drug Policy, and Human Resources approved HR 2086. Disturbing new language in the bill amends the scope of the National Youth Anti-Drug Media Campaign, allowing government officials to use federal funds to "take such actions as necessary to oppose any attempt to legalize the use of a substance." In other words, the ONDCP may soon be able to spend hundreds of millions of taxpayer dollars every year on radio, print, and television ads opposing medical marijuana initiatives and trying to defeat candidates who support more compassionate drug laws. "If this provision stands," says Steve Fox, director of government relations for the Marijuana Policy Project, "it means that the drug czar can use our tax dollars to fund partisan political campaigns." Dominic Holden is the director of Seattle Hempfest, the largest annual marijuana policy reform rally in the United States, and campaign manager for I-75, an initiative to de-prioritize the enforcement of Seattle's marijuana laws. - --- MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager