Pubdate: Fri, 06 Aug 2004 Source: North Shore Sunday (Beverly, MA) Contact: 2004 Community Newspapers Inc. Website: http://www.northshoresunday.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3465 Author: Joel Beck BLODGETT JUST SAYS NO Essex County District Attorney Jonathan Blodgett has heard all of the arguments for decriminalizing marijuana. He doesn't buy any of them. "I have yet to be persuaded that it's for the public good," says Blodgett, who has worked in recent months to intensify the fight on drugs such as heroin on the North Shore and says marijuana shouldn't be treated any differently. Blodgett says that for all the arguments pot activists make to show that marijuana is a relatively harmless substance, he can dig up just as much evidence to prove just the opposite. "I think that medical research has finally caught up with some of these issues," he says. "It has shown that there are negative, long-term effects to marijuana use. Also, I do believe that marijuana is a gateway drug. The kids who start smoking marijuana at an early age will often graduate to other, more harmful forms of drug use." That may be true, but some marijuana supporters insist that if the road to hardcore drugs is indeed paved with marijuana, the relationship between the two is indirect at best. "It's my personal opinion that the only way it's a gateway drug is that people are willing to break the law," says Gary Insuik, a Salem resident and member of the Massachusetts Cannabis Reform Coalition (Mass Cann). "That's the hardest decision. But once you get used to breaking the law, you'll continue to break the law." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake