Pubdate: Thu, 22 Jul 2004 Source: State News, The (MI State U, MI Edu) Copyright: 2004 The State News Contact: http://www.statenews.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1246 Author: Patrick Walters RENEWED ANTI-POT CAMPAIGN SEEMS ARTIFICIAL, REAL THREAT ABSENT Since marijuana hasn't been too provocative a subject across news wires lately, it seemed odd to me for Reuters news service to grace the world with an astoundingly vague story on the changing face of U.S. drug policy. Apparently, marijuana is stronger than ever, younger than ever are smoking it and more of them are requiring abuse treatment as a result. After a long rest, it looks like the White House is again making pot the ace of spades in the war on drugs deck of cards. I wish there were more information I could supply on just how our national drug policies will change, but of the 23 paragraphs of text, only the first two made reference to any realignment. The other 21 discussed how the effects of marijuana on a younger brain carry potentially more dangerous consequences, how the White House will need cooperation from reluctant local cops, exactly how much stronger pot is today than in 1988 and you can probably imagine the rest. Since the issue of medicinal marijuana is a touch passe - except in Ann Arbor - perhaps Reuters was just fulfilling its "drugs are bad" quota for the summer. It's not any real news, just a little crumb to let everyone know the White House is still concerned about high school students burning one in the parking lot before school. Ahem. Problems with drug use just simply aren't sexy this year. It's been a few years since "Traffic" and "Blow" put drug use up the nose of national consciousness, but just because drug abuse isn't in the limelight in 2004, we're still not allowed to call it irrelevant because of the nature of the beast. As long as there have been drugs, drugs have killed - adults, children, everyone. But while the D.A.R.E. program is proving to be ineffective in deterring children from drugs, studies are showing that less teenagers are using drugs, and that schools are actually cleaner than they used to be. Then Reuters pops out pieces like that. In 2004, youths are not abusing drugs like they used to. They are smarter than they used to be, they know the consequences of drug use - physical and legal - better than most adults and, thanks to "South Park," jokes about hippies are funny again. So, White House Office of National Drug Control Policy, you're winning the war on keeping drugs out of young hands. What to do next? Tell the nation that your children are getting high on the strongest pot ever. It only makes sense, doesn't it? Scrap the fight against drugs you can actually overdose on - cocaine and heroin - and continue to make criminals out of the 20 million American adults who responsibly use and enjoy marijuana. One nonsmoker to maybe - but probably not - another, I can say that the laws against marijuana in this country do not accurately represent the will of the people. Regardless of what has happened in Washington since 2001, I still have faith in the justice system. I believe that the scales are still calibrated to equality and fairness, and while my politics may differ, I believe that every Supreme Court Justice is qualified to do what they do, discounting the times they undermine the Constitution. Laws are supposed to reflect the will of those governed by them. Reinforcing an emphasis on the illegality of marijuana, though, is not the will of the people. Or, at least 20 million-plus of them, or at least the 80 million who have admitted to trying it at least once. Continuing to make criminals out of the populace for enjoying a harmless vice is the real crime - not holding a joint. The word "harmless" probably threw up a red flag. The reason that marijuana laws need to be decriminalized - meaning, if you're caught with less than an ounce you won't go to jail - is because, unlike most every other drug, there is such a thing as responsible use of marijuana. Marijuana might be getting stronger, but in the grand scheme of things, it's even safer than responsible use of alcohol. Detach yourself for one moment from the fact that marijuana is an illegal substance and compare it to alcohol and tobacco. Not so bad now, is it? When someone goes overboard on booze, we send them to rehabilitation and pray they'll kick the addiction. Watch television for an hour or check your e-mail and you'll see how dedicated we all are to helping smokers "quit smoking now." But when someone sells a pipe over the Internet to an undercover Drug Enforcement Administration agent posing as a head shop - which is called entrapment, John Ashcroft - we send Tommy Chong to prison for nine months. We're actually a very compassionate, understanding society. But, why the compassion turns to persecution because the vice is illegal only in language will continue to astonish me. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh