Pubdate: Sun, 25 Apr 2004 Source: Tallahassee Democrat (FL) Copyright: 2004 Tallahassee Democrat. Contact: http://www.tallahassee.com/mld/democrat/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/444 Note: Prints email address for LTEs sent by email Author: Gerald Ensley Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis) IN THE GOOD OLE DAYS, WE SMOKED POT There are two things you can count on at 3:30 a.m. at our house: I'll get up to use the bathroom and the college kids in the nearby apartment complex still will be whooping it up at the top of their lungs. Today's college kids party late, and their drug of choice is alcohol, which tends to make people loud. Starting about 2 a.m., the kids roll in from the bars, set the stereo speakers on the deck, crank up the tunes and yell delightedly until daylight. We're two blocks over, so it's not too bad for us. But the neighbors alongside the complex are going crazy. They call the cops, the cops chase one party inside and a half-hour later a different party erupts outside. Some neighbors have called the cops three times in one night and still not gotten much sleep. I'm all for young people and partying. But I tell you what, that kind of thing didn't happen in my day. No, sir. When I went to college, we smoked pot when we partied. That kept us mellow and quiet. The last thing we wanted to do was go outside, make a lot of noise, annoy the neighbors and have them call the cops. We need to get back to those days. We need to legalize marijuana. We should have done it already. It's chic to complain about the baby-boomer generation. To say we are self-indulgent and materialistic. To say we haven't fought a great war, haven't written the great American novel and haven't put an imprint on society. I say baloney. Baby boomers demanded sensitivity, tolerance and equality from society. We made this a better world for black people and women and gays and gave voice to a dozen previously ignored issues. But we didn't follow through on drugs. We smoked pot and said we would legalize it when we ran the world. Well, we run the world now, and we haven't done anything. We should be ashamed. The war on drugs is killing us. More than 5 million people have been arrested in the past decade for marijuana violations. We spend $25 billion a year for law enforcement, legal fees and incarceration of drug offenders. The laws and penalties against marijuana violate a half-dozen constitutional guarantees (privacy, due process, equal protection, freedom of religion). We are ruining lives and wasting money in a fruitless defense of a false morality. The urge to intoxicate is as old as mankind. The majority of those who use drugs recreationally also conduct productive lives. Those who become addicted to drugs have medical and psychological problems that need treatment, not punishment. We should legalize all drugs. But marijuana would be a good start: Statistics show only one in 100 of those who regularly smoke marijuana goes on to regularly use cocaine or heroin. There are two reasons why boomers haven't changed the drug laws. One is they became parents and became just as fearful and hypocritical as their parents. They bought into the scare tactics of drug opponents and didn't trust their children to make wise choices. The other reason is drug prohibitions lost resonance with baby boomers. They got older, quit smoking dope and quit caring about the issue. They need to care again. We made the world better for black people and women and gays by sustained support of legal changes. We can make the world better for everyone with sustained support of marijuana legalization. Then maybe we can all get some sleep in my neighborhood. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh