Pubdate: Thu, 22 Dec 2005
Source: Vue Weekly (CN AB)
Copyright: 2005, Vue Weekly.
Contact:  http://www.vueweekly.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2918
Author: Annalee Newitz
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada)

HIGH ON SCIENCE

Canadian scientists refuse to be swayed by U.S.  propaganda when it comes 
to researching the possible  benefits of pot

My favourite news bump of the past couple of months  started in one of my 
favourite Canadian cities:  Saskatoon. Researchers there at the University 
of  Saskatchewan recently demonstrated that marijuana rejuvenates cells in 
the hippocampus, an area of the  brain associated with learning and 
memory.  Neuroscientist Xia Zhang and his team injected rats  with a 
superpotent chemical synthesized to resemble a chemical found in a typical 
puff of pot. And, under the  influence of this mega-marijuana, the rats 
started  growing new brain cells.

Please tell me this means that all those annoying  American PSAs with 
Rachael Leigh Cook smashing things  and talking about "your brain on drugs" 
will have to be  rethought--or possibly just erased from the 
nation's  cultural memory. Then again, with all those new brain  cells 
we'll be growing, it might be hard for us to  forget.

I don't want to jump on the I-told-you-so bandwagon  about this, because 
the U of S study comes with all the  usual disclaimers: Rats aren't the 
same as people; the  drug the rats took wasn't exactly the same 
as  marijuana; the drug was administered in ultradoses;  don't do this at 
home; et cetera. But it's still hard  not to dance around a little when I 
find a good, solid  scientific study that doesn't just reiterate all 
the  old propaganda about how pot rots your brain and turns  you into a zombie.

There are a lot of weird historical reasons for that  propaganda, not the 
least of which is racism. Alcohol,  a drug that is arguably more 
debilitating and socially  destructive than pot, is a European vice. Pot, 
on the  other hand, was used by Natives across the Americas. It was 
outlawed in the United States during the  1930s--roughly around the same 
time that young Natives  were being rounded up and put into orphanages to 
be  "civilized." It was also around this time that black jazz musicians 
were enjoying the weed as well.

But no group was more closely associated with marijuana  than Mexicans. In 
1935 a representative from a  California antidrug group told the New York 
Times,  "Marihuana, perhaps now the most insidious of our  narcotics, is a 
direct by-product of unrestricted  Mexican immigration." Legislators chose 
to use the  Mexican word for the drug to intensify this connection.  And 
pot regulation started in states near the Mexican  border--where it was 
being imported at a rapid clip--and culminated in the 1937 Marihuana Tax 
Act, a  federal law that made nearly all pot trafficking a  crime.

None of the legislation that prohibited marijuana sales  was motivated by 
health concerns. In fact, the hearings  leading up to the 1937 law dealt 
very little with "this  is your brain"-style issues: the main evidence used 
to  demonstrate the ill effects of marijuana (other than its connection 
with Mexicans) was a few sensationalist  articles from Hearst newspapers 
about how pot turned  upstanding citizens into criminals.

After the Marihuana Tax Act went into effect, law  enforcement gradually 
cracked down on all the U.S.  citizens trying frantically to grow their 
hippocampi.  But people interested in bringing scientific fact into  this 
mystified kerfuffle were also there trying to  remind everyone that drugs 
weren't the problem.

I was reminded of this quite forcefully the other day  when I picked up a 
first edition of Aldous Huxley's  1946 monograph Science, Liberty, and 
Peace on the  street in New York City's East Village. In it, Huxley  argues 
that the government uses science to keep its citizens in line, thus 
perverting science from its aim  of enlightenment. Huxley is also the 
author of another  famous monograph, The Doors of Perception, a 
very  eloquent defense of mescaline and other banned drugs as  tools for 
mind expansion. As his novel Brave New World  makes clear, Huxley was well 
aware of the negative uses  to which drugs could be put, but he still 
argued that  people should be free to try them, because they might  also 
have educational properties nobody understood yet.

The guys with stoned rats over at the U of S are  scientists in the Huxley 
tradition: They refuse to be  cowed by propaganda that prevents us from 
discovering  the possible benefits of drugs. I don't know about you,  but 
I'm feeling kind of high on science right now. VAnnalee Newitz is a 
contributing editor at Wired  magazine. Her forthcoming book, Pretend We're 
Dead  (Duke University Press), is about monster movies and  capitalism.

Reprinted with permission from Featurewell.com. 
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MAP posted-by: Jo-D