Pubdate: Tue, 09 Nov 2004 Source: Gateway, The (CN AB Edu) Copyright: 2004 Gateway Student Journalism Society Contact: http://www.gateway.ualberta.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3149 Author: Tim Peppin Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/opinion.htm (Opinion) MARIJUANA HAS THE POWER TO ENLIGHTEN Try as I might to be contentious, sometimes I'm obliged to write something that I feel will go over well with the majority of the student body. Not because I'm selling my literary soul in an effort to pander to your tastes, mind you, but simply because we both believe it's true. Marijuana is long past due to be fully legalized. I'm not going to get into the original reasons why marijuana was criminalized, nor why it continues to be so, mostly because I don't know all that much about it and am too lazy to research. Whatever their reasons were, though, the lawmakers got it wrong. Now, undoubtedly, there are those of you reading whose stomachs have just tightened uncomfortably, whose anuses have snapped shut like so many startled clams, and who are on the verge of a thorough panty-bunching fret over the health, welfare, and mental stability of your fellow man, to say nothing of the fate of the universe. These are drugs we're talking about. I sympathize. Most drug use is, in my opinion, if not in itself inimical to happiness, then at least representative of some unaddressed underlying source of unhappiness. Drug abuse often begins not because the influence of the drug is so immediately compelling, nor because the drug itself is so physically addictive, but because it offers very effective suppression of the subconscious awareness of these sources of unhappiness, and because it can be administered entirely at the discretion of the user. It offers tractable escape. Not so with your old friend Mary Jane. I'm sure most marijuana smokers have experienced those painful moments of glaring introspection, where your own failings, hypocrisies and inadequacies are laid on the examining table. Marijuana, far from offering some sort of anaesthetized hallucinatory delirium or an illusion of invincibility or inexhaustible energy, simply offers a more accentuated and focused view of the world around us and inside us. Carl Sagan, one of the best men I've ever known, celebrated astronomer, writer and humanitarian, was an avid user and proponent of marijuana. For Carl, for me, for everyone I know who appreciates marijuana, it's a portal to the most fascinating, vibrant and simple joys that life possesses: subtle nuances of form and colour in artwork, the intricate layers and fineries of good music, a refinement of the palette capable of discerning the delicate interplay and components of food, a feeling of brotherhood and communion among friends, a disposition towards compassion and tolerance, a closeness and wild intensity in sex, a heightening, a re-evaluation, and an intensification of those same senses which are our constant window to the world. However, it should not be pretended that marijuana has no drawbacks. Controlled studies have been done showing that it can impair one's ability to drive, especially when complemented with alcohol. It can accentuate paranoia for people with otherwise mild social anxiety. It can lead to unhealthy dietary choices, like chips and ice cream. In spite of these shortcomings, however, as a whole, and taken moderately, I believe it to be a beneficial substance. I make no apologies for my use of marijuana, nor for promoting its use amongst others. The level of irrationality and hypocrisy surrounding North American drug policies has reached a ludicrous pitch. Step into the nearest hospital or pharmacy and observe the level of drug use, many of which have abominable side effects. Walk to the closest grocery store or coffee peddler and observe the steady stream of grotesquely obese customers filling their carts with caffeine-rich colas, or waiting irritably for their morning "fix." Walk to the closest bar and observe the effects of our culture's most accepted and legitimized drug use: belligerence, animosity, irrationality, violence, oblivion to even the strongest stimulation; a surreal circus of the most primal, undignified and transparent human motivations. Then look me in the eye and tell me marijuana is harmful. I'll laugh in your face. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin