Pubdate: Thu, 15 Feb 2007 Source: Collegiate Times (VA Tech, Edu) Copyright: 2007 Collegiate Times Contact: http://www.collegiatetimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/699 Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v07/n000/a013.html Author: Jeremy A. Kniseley SGA SHOULD THAT MARIJUANA LEGISLATION IS PASSED As an active and devoted student of Virginia Tech, I am much appalled by the comments of the author of "Virginia Tech has a reputation to uphold" (CT. Feb. 7). Perhaps the only accurate and educated ideas he presents are the structures of Tech's grand reputation. It seems quite obvious that the author was unable to understand, or incompetent to perform any research, so as to gather an appropriate idea in respect to what Student for Sensible Drug Policy stands for and strives to attain. It is logical to have a standard drug policy regarding the illegal use of marijuana and alcohol, considering circumstances where, in fact, they are both illegal. As a learned student body, we need to disregard the issue of political conservatives criminalizing marijuana and focus on the topic at hand. Simple enough, broken laws are broken laws. The Tech chapter of SSDP is not passing legislation to make marijuana legal. The most disturbing and embarrassing part of that commentary is the futile story about his freshman year on campus. Certainly everyone understands that some people have problems with marijuana, just like people have addictions to LSD, cocaine, and, yes, alcohol. What is the point to that story? Even more people have roommates their freshman year that fail out of school and/or get jobs to support their poor alcohol habits. Is this not proof that marijuana and alcohol policy on campus should be at least equivalent? Thank you for wasting our time, paper, and patience. I hope that the Student Government Association will see through this legislation put forth by SSDP, and bring reason to policy so the Tech community does not have to look back in ten years and see further injustice done by the likes of ignorant people. Jeremy A. Kniseley, SSDP Junior, Classical Studies - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake