Pubdate: Mon, 28 Jan 2008 Source: Athens News, The (OH) Copyright: 2008, Athens News Contact: http://www.athensnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1603 Author: Mike Ludwig, Athens News Campus Reporter Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Marijuana) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization) MARIJUANA LEGALIZATION DEBATE TURNS HEADS ON CAMPUS Hundreds of Ohio University students packed into Baker Center Theater to see the "Heads vs. Feds" debate Thursday night, and the size of the crowd alone was proof that the legalization of marijuana, four decades after the '60s, remains an issue of students' concern. The debate pitted former High Times Editor Steve Hager against the former head of New York City's Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA). The spirited presentation inspired some students to create a pro-cannabis group on campus. "It's fun and empowering to be an activist, and it's fun and empowering to change bad laws," Hager told the audience during his closing statement. He suggested that students who are interested in legalizing marijuana should get serious and start a chapter of the National Organization to Reform Marijuana Laws (NORML) or Students for Sensible Drug Policy (SSDP) on campus. "When wars end, people celebrate in the streets," Hager said. "When this war ends, we will celebrate." Despite their different perspectives, Hager and his opponent, former DEA agent Robert Stutman, agreed on the benefits of students getting involved in social and political issues. "The day the majority of Americans vote to legalize the recreational use of cannabis, I will support it," Stutman said. The agent encouraged young people seeking to change America's drug policy to realize that most people don't want to liberalize the laws and encourage marijuana use. They should try to change social attitudes and public policy. Students should put their opinions on the election ballot and "play by the rules" if they want to be taken seriously. Hager and Stutman's advice did not fall on dead ears. Interested students stuck around after the debate to meet the debaters and discuss the issue. OU junior Bill Hein said he spoke with Hager about the prospect of starting an OU chapter of NORML or SSDP for about 20 minutes after the debate. Hager suggested starting an SSDP chapter as a way to build membership and bolster student support, according to Hein. Hein has since started an SSDP Facebook group that had 41 members as of Sunday. The membership hasn't stopped growing, he said, and he hopes "the people who join the organization have the cause in mind." After the debate, OU senior Nick Greiwe created a sign-up sheet that drew the contacts of 19 students who were interested in starting a pro-legalization student group. He said he's now working with Hein to start up the OU SSDP. "We need motivated people to come, not people who just want to sit around and talk about drugs," Greiwe said Friday. The "Heads vs. Feds" debate showcased the common arguments of supporters and opponents of marijuana legalization. The debaters definitely have the credentials for their respective positions. Hager has actively promoted the legalization movement since the 1990s, founded the Cannabis Cup in Amsterdam, and has been involved in counter-culture journalism since high school in the late 1960s. Stutman served as a federal "street" narcotics agent for 17 years before becoming the special agent in charge of the DEA in New York City. Hager argued that marijuana can be effective medicine and has legitimate spiritual uses. He maintained that the black market created by marijuana prohibition supports corruption and drug cartels around the world, and that drug laws in the United States inhibit personal freedom and ruin otherwise law-abiding people's lives with prison sentences. "We have built the largest prison system in the world in my lifetime," Hager said. "I think doing 10 years in the prison system is worse for you than smoking a joint." While agreeing that drug use alone shouldn't warrant a prison sentence, Stutman said legalizing marijuana just validates a drug that intoxicates, impairs depth perception, and can lead to health problems such as lung cancer. Stutman called Hager's notion of personal freedom "anarchy" and claimed that "Americans are not ready to make another mistake like we did with alcohol and tobacco." "Heads vs. Feds" was the first of four back-and-forths in Baker Center's "Sex, Drugs and Rock 'n Roll" debate series. A debate on music piracy featuring the founder of the Recording Industry Association of America is set for Feb. 2, porn legend Ron Jeremy will debate a minister on Feb. 21, and the final debate on March 6 will ask the question "Does God Exist?" For more information on the debate series, visit http://www.ohio.edu/center/events/index.cfm. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake