Pubdate: Fri, 09 Jul 2004 Source: Arkansas News Bureau (Wire: AR) Copyright: 2004 Arkansas News Bureau Note: A state Wire: service, not a print publication Author: Jack Moseley Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/opinion.htm (Opinion) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis) THE POINTS FOR MAKING IT LEGAL The fellow reached into his shirt pocket and pulled out a marijuana cigarette. Lighting it, he said matter-of-factly, "Would you like a joint?" I declined. Not from fear I might be turned instantly into an incurable addict. Not because I feared being tempted to try harder drugs. Not even out of any kind of moral superiority. The only pot I ever inhaled gave me a headache. My wife and I used to go to Sunday movie matinees and sit in the balcony, where we could smoke good ole, legal, health-destroying American tobacco. It was impossible, however, not to inhale the second-hand pot fumes from those around us imbibing in something I always had been told would totally destroy my life. I've more than mellowed on the marijuana issue, however. In fact, I really don't see why Arkansas doesn't go all the way and legalize pot after putting a heavy tax on it, just like we've done with booze and cigarettes. It's pretty obvious we're not going to stop people from puffing the stuff. As for ruining lives, I'm increasingly convinced state and federal governments have ruined the lives of people who smoke marijuana far more than the substance itself. Before you start jumping up and down and organizing protest rallies, I'm not saying that pot cannot be abused. Obviously, it can impair your ability to control a motor vehicle or operate machinery or perform any number of other human endeavors, much the same as whiskey or beer can. In heavy and prolonged use, I guess it can destroy brain cells. I'm not suggesting we legalize the consequences of puffing on this weed, just decriminalize the weed itself. I continue to read and be told that in moderation marijuana inflicts less bodily injury to the occasional user than tobacco. We should not encourage our children to consume alcohol, tobacco, pot or any other potentially harmful substance. In today's society, however, young people too often see parents and other adults doing all of the above. For millions of Americans, it is pure hypocrisy for countless moms and dads to tell their children not to do things the kids are apt to catch their elders actually doing. Legalizing marijuana would restore a degree of honesty to our often less-than-truthful culture. Every possible incentive, including laws like those forbidding the sale of tobacco and alcohol to minors, should be retained and strictly enforced. I believe the American people once again are far ahead of their elected representatives on the marijuana legalization issue. Canada, which already allows legal marijuana consumption for the control of chronic pain in people with cancer and other illnesses, this fall will launch an experiment in which any adult will be allowed to purchase small amounts of pot over the counter at the corner pharmacy without a prescription. The least America can do is observe this experiment and see how it either works or fails. In Canada, the only problem I see is that the government seems a bit greedy in charging $110 per ounce for the stuff. Canadian patients using government pot have criticized the quality - not the price - of the weed, however. Some have said the illegal variety does them more "good" than the legal stuff. By contrast, it remains against federal law to possess any amount of marijuana for any purpose anywhere in the United States. Penalties for a first offense marijuana violation range from probation to long prison sentences. Eleven states have decriminalized marijuana, but most retain harsh laws against the drug. In Louisiana, you can get 20 years for selling 1 ounce. In Washington, selling even one joint brings a recommended sentence of five years. According to The New York Times, about 700,000 people get arrested for violating marijuana laws in this country each year. Most get charged with simple possession and are convicted of misdemeanors. Those nonfelony arrests, however, frequently carry jail time that costs people their jobs or suspensions of drivers' licenses. In some states, possession of as little as 1 ounce is a felony. Some states make a marijuana arrest grounds for denial of food stamps or other federal welfare programs, while allowing convicted murderers and rapists to continuing receiving such benefits. Meanwhile, state and federal governments will spend hundreds of millions of our tax dollars this year to arrest and confine people for smoking pot. I don't think I'm standing up for potheads. What I'm saying is this: Aren't there better uses for that money, like going after those who traffic in hard drugs that do far more documented harm? Ronald Reagan declared war on marijuana in 1982; we've been losing that war ever since. Isn't it time to try a new approach? I believe it is, but you won't see political candidates with the courage to take on such a controversial idea in this election year. For politicians, it's far easier for them to stick with the status quo and the lives it frequently ruins than to consider alternatives that just might save some money and make our justice system a bit more fair. Fairness flies out the window when it comes to marijuana law enforcement. Punishment depends strictly on where you get busted, and that's just flat wrong. Life, luck and -30-. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin