Pubdate: Wed, 3 Sep 2008 Source: Press-Enterprise (Riverside, CA) Copyright: 2008 The Press-Enterprise Company Contact: http://www.pe.com/localnews/opinion/letters_form.html Website: http://www.pe.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/830 Author: Roger Anderson Note: Roger Anderson is parent coalition leader for the Inland Valley Drug Free Community Coalition. He is a resident of San Bernardino. Cited: San Bernardino County Board of Supervisors http://www.co.san-bernardino.ca.us/bos/ Cited: Riverside County Board of Supervisors http://drugsense.org/url/vYhj159m Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/opinion.htm (Opinion) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topic/Proposition+215 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Marijuana - Medicinal) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topic/Inland+Valley+Drug+Free POT LAW: A SCAM San Bernardino and San Diego counties have joined to fight back against the problems brought to our state by the pro-legalization pot initiative called Prop. 215 ("Counties to challenge state's medical pot law," Aug. 27). Despite a very small pro-legalization group that protested against San Bernardino County in mid-August in a poor attempt to demand pot cards, members of the San Bernardino County Board of supervisors saw through their smoke and will now ask the state Supreme Court to intervene in the subsequent Medical Marijuana Program Act. Giving pot to people is a violation of federal law, and for good reason. Smoked marijuana is not approved by the Federal Drug Administration because marijuana brings more harm than good to the body -- and community -- than the drug-legalization movement has been telling us here in California for well over a decade. Kudos to San Bernardino and San Diego counties for trying to undo problems caused by Prop. 215, which sanctioned pot use for medical reasons. Prop. 215, approved by voters in 1996 and precursor to the Medical Marijuana Program Act, was a scam. Today, more than a quarter million Californians have medical pot cards. That number is nearly equal to the entire population of the city of Riverside, and Riverside County is now adding to the problem by issuing pot cards, and at taxpayers' expense using county employees and a county facility to do so. To date, Riverside County has issued more than 1,000 pot cards. This is nonsense. Such money would be better spent on education, especially given scarce public funds for legitimate services. The drug-legalization movement in Riverside is attempting to grow, and its members continue to push the sick in front of the media for their own selfish cause. Stop Issuing Cards The city of Riverside must act to ban marijuana dispensaries (like its neighbors), and Riverside County must reverse course and stop issuing marijuana ID cards. Doing so will solidify the Inland Empire as a region that saw through the scam we were fooled into voting for more than 10 years ago. Drug users need drug treatment, not more drugs. It's horrible that people get sick. Medical-marijuana supporters say symptoms of certain illnesses can be alleviated with the drug, but smoked marijuana is not medicine. Numerous drugs have been approved by the FDA for these symptoms though. However, the pro-legalization people fight this argument tooth and nail. They know that when they are exposed, the public will see their effort for what it is -- a drug-legalization movement that pushed Prop. 215 for no other reason than to feed its members' own addictions, with zero concern for communities and public safety. For example, they couldn't care less that many high school students might gather that it is OK for them to smoke marijuana. For the drug-legalization movement, these youths are their next generation of legal-drug advocates. Never mind that these kids risk falling down the slippery slope of drug use, abuse and addiction. Never will you hear the legal-drug movement reference "help" for drug users. Well, the Inland Valley Drug Free Community Coalition will. Users of marijuana and other drugs should utilize the vast network of resources. Our Web site is a great place to start ( www.ivdfc.org). Unfortunately, the drug-legalization movement in the Inland Empire networks with other pro-drug organizations nationwide. The only way to counter such a negative influence in our community is to fight back, and that's exactly what the Inland Valley Drug Free Community Coalition -- along with more than 700 other drug-free community coalitions nationwide -- will continue to do with our volunteer parents, teachers, youths and other community members. Divert Pot Funding Marijuana use is just one concern among many for our coalition. However, with the growing pro-pot propaganda in the region, we are obligated to counter such nonsense for the good of our communities and safety of our children. Again, Riverside County's pot-card funding should be diverted to drug education, prevention, treatment and enforcement programs, not pot dispensaries. Kudos to San Bernardino and San Diego counties for trying to overturn California's Medical Marijuana Program Act! Now it's time for the city of Riverside and Riverside County to step up to the plate and knock the drug-legalization movement off its Purple Haze and sugar kush highs.