Pubdate: Tue, 12 Oct 2004 Source: Herald, The (SC) Copyright: 2004 The Herald Contact: http://www.heraldonline.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/369 Author: Janet Martini Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v04/n1338/a09.html?161305 DON'T UNDERESTIMATE MARIJUANA DANGERS I am writing in response to the recent commentary, "Drug war is a war against the truth," by Paul Campos, professor of law at the University of Colorado. It appears that the professor's view of marijuana has not wavered since his comments in an article that appeared in the Feb. 11, 2001, edition of The Herald. The purpose of writing is not to discuss the legalization of illegal drugs or levels of potency, but rather to question the professor's rationalizations. The professor states that "tens of thousands of Americans are in prison today because we treat a drug (marijuana) that has never killed anyone as if it were far more dangerous than a drug (alcohol) that kills tens of thousands of Americans every year." I am certainly not going to dispute the professor's point that excessive use of alcohol can lead to death. But what information is he using to support his claim that marijuana has never killed anyone? Researchers at the St. Louis University School of Medicine say large doses of marijuana may be related to stroke deaths among teenagers (April 26, 2004). Recently researchers studied three teenage boys, two of whom died from strokes shortly after smoking marijuana. All three had similar types of strokes centered in the cerebellum that could not be explained by blood clots traveling from the heart, blood-vessel inflammation or other causes. Dr. Thomas Geller said the teenagers' stroke deaths could be linked to marijuana binging or periodic use of large amounts of marijuana. (All three had similar symptoms shortly after their marijuana use, including severe headache and problems seeing and walking.) More information on marijuana, "the burning truth": . Marijuana is often used in combination with alcohol and other drugs. . For every 100 people who have tried marijuana, 28 of them try cocaine. . 40 percent of high school teens try marijuana before they graduate. . Marijuana can be physically and psychologically addictive. . One joint damages the lungs as much as an entire pack of cigarettes. Effects include: . Increased heart rate . Decreased muscle coordination . Memory loss and slower learning ability . Lowered hormone levels and sperm count . Delayed sexual development and can cause permanent infertility . Decreased motivation, energy, concentration . Impaired driving ability Marijuana is a concern for everyone, in the family, in school, and in the work place. Let the truth be told Dr. Campos, drug abuse, whether legal or illegal, whether more or less potent can kill. Janet Martini, Executive Director, Keystone, Rock Hill - --- MAP posted-by: Derek