Pubdate: Fri, 18 Apr 2008
Source: Crimson White, The (Edu, Univ of Alabama)
Copyright: 2008 The Crimson White.
Contact:  http://www.cw.ua.edu/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2451
Author: Laura Pitts

A GRASSROOTS EFFORT

Experts Debate the Effects and Laws of Marijuana

Unseen.

That's how it tries to stay - hidden in pockets, behind car seats, in 
closets and under beds.

Some who smoke it do so with pride. The rest hide in apartments or 
bathrooms, worried they will get caught.

Weed, pot or cannabis - no matter what you call it, the effects are 
the same. But what's the hype behind smoking marijuana?

According to the National Institute on Drug Abuse's official Web 
site, a 2004 survey said 14.6 million Americans age 12 and older used 
marijuana at least once in the month prior to being surveyed.

Robert Jenkot, an assistant professor of criminal justice, said most 
people who smoke marijuana do so for the same reason people drink 
alcohol underage - it is prohibited.

"Doing anything that is prohibited raises the feelings of rebellion 
and fitting in," Jenkot said. "College-age kids, in particular, are 
away from home - some for the first time - and they want to 
experience smoking or drinking, even if it is illegal."

The NIDA cited government surveys saying some 20 million Americans 
have smoked marijuana in the past year, and more than 11 million do 
so regularly, despite harsh laws against its use.

Numerous advocacy groups weigh the pros and cons on the issue of 
marijuana use, but, according to UA professor of family medicine Dr. 
Alan Blum, only one side can win.

"I've seen, on a pro and con Web site, that there have been no deaths 
directly attributed to the use of marijuana, but that shouldn't fool 
us into thinking that there aren't any long term effects of the 
drug," said Blum, director of the UA Center for the Study of Tobacco 
and Society. "The drug has effects not only on the user, but those in 
relation to the user. It's a dangerous substance that shouldn't be 
taken lightly."

Smoke Break

April 20 - this Sunday - has become the avid pot smokers' holiday.

The term "4/20" commemorates a group of teenagers at San Rafael High 
School in San Rafael, Calif., in 1971 that would meet after school at 
4:20 p.m. around the Louis Pasteur statue to smoke marijuana.

"Now, to commemorate either the issue of legalization or 'good ol' 
high school days,' people still smoke on the day," Jenkot said.

Personal reasons for smoking cover a wide range. Some smoke to relax, 
others to have fun. There's even a small portion of the community 
using it for medical reasons.

"I think it's more recreation in Alabama than medical," said Allison 
Sperando, a junior majoring in visual journalism. "It's a way for 
people to have something to do when they are bored."

Sperando said she doesn't think it's right to smoke pot, but she does 
have friends who smoke it.

"I'm not going to quit being their friends because of it," she said. 
"I just don't think it's right to smoke it, though."

Lara Ellen Powell, a senior majoring in advertising, said people 
shouldn't smoke marijuana as long as it is illegal.

"If it is legalized, then it should be your own personal choice to 
use it," Powell said. "If it's still illegal, then you shouldn't do it."

A UA student who asked to remain anonymous said she started smoking 
marijuana in the 10th grade. At first, she didn't like it and the 
only side effect she experienced was nausea.

"I just tried it with some girlfriends of mine," the junior marketing 
major said. "Older people had been smoking it and we were all curious."

She said she smokes everyday and the amount she smokes isn't "a great 
deal." She said she prefers smoking marijuana to drinking alcohol and 
said smoking the drug allows a person to function better.

"I'm really bad at math and smoking helps me clam down and 
concentrate on my homework," she said.

Legalizing marijuana, the junior said, would benefit society.

"I think our legal system focuses on trivial things," she said. "We 
waste so much time on those trivial things when we should be focused 
elsewhere."

A Forbidden Fruit

Blum said there are two extreme sides to the marijuana use issue.

"To say that smoking marijuana doesn't cause harm is completely 
nonsense," Blum said. "But to say it's the root of all evil is just as wrong."

Blum said these sides of marijuana use must be looked at objectively, 
and people who use Internet sources and marijuana advocacy groups as 
sources need to be careful about information taken from those groups.

"The most misleading and disorganized group, I think, is NORML, 
because they discount the adverse effects of the drug," Blum said. 
"They act as if all these people that get caught with marijuana have 
had their lives ruined and therefore a solution is to make it all legal."

NORML, the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws, is 
the oldest marijuana reform lobby group in the country and claims to 
have helped with the decriminalization of marijuana in several states.

Ron Fisher, national outreach coordinator for NORML, said the group 
doesn't promote the use of marijuana, but has strong opinions about 
the arrests of more than 800,000 people a year.

"Eighty-nine percent of those arrested are for possession only," 
Fisher said. "It's a huge strain on our national budget during a time 
when we are straining for every government dollar."

Other than committing the offense of smoking marijuana, this 89 
percent is made of otherwise law-abiding, tax-paying citizens, Fisher said.

"We shouldn't be jailing people because of the short-term effects of 
marijuana," Fisher said. "It's a 24-hour thing, not a crazy trip, 
like using LSD."

Currently, 12 states have decriminalized marijuana use. Fisher said 
NORML is a major factor in the changes of those particular states' laws.

"Today, we focus on grassroots stuff and try to get the view of the 
people out there," Fisher said. "We want tell the reality of the fact 
that [marijuana] is not dangerous and relatively harmless - not like 
methamphetamines, which should be the focus on the $24 million drug budget."

Alabama state law says that anyone in possession of marijuana is a 
criminal and can be arrested. According to NORML, with the possession 
of one kilogram (2.2 lbs) or less, the crime is a misdemeanor, 
punishable by up to one year in jail and a fine of up to $2,000. For 
possession of any amount over one kilogram, the crime is a felony, 
punishable by one to 10 years in prison and a fine of up to $5,000.

The worst thing that can happen to someone - especially a college 
student - caught smoking pot, Fisher said, is going to jail.

"As a college student, if you are caught with any amount of 
marijuana, you lose all access to student aid," Fisher said. "If you 
are dependent on food stamps, you can lose access to that, as well."

NORML acknowledges that marijuana is not 100 percent safe. However, 
they say all the data shows marijuana is much safer than alcohol.

"Drunk-driving due to excessive alcohol intake kills 50,000 people 
each year and tobacco kills 400,000 people each year," Fisher said. 
"Achieving an overdose of marijuana isn't possible. I think it takes 
about 500 puffs in a minute to cause an overdose."

Though smoking anything does produce carcinogens harmful to the body, 
Fisher said there are two safe ways to consume marijuana: eating and 
vaporization.

"Vaporization is basically just heating the air around it without 
burning it," Fisher said. "Both effects are 100 percent safe."

Blum, however, said he doesn't see anything good in using marijuana.

"I don't understand the cause of some advocacy groups," Blum said. 
"If the cause is to get a lot of first-time offenders out of jail 
that haven't hurt anybody, I couldn't agree more. The people at NORML 
[say] that this stuff is good, it can't hurt and anyone should have 
the right to use it. It's a bizarre logic and they are very a 
dishonest organization."

According to the National Institute on Drug Abuse research report 
series on marijuana abuse, when marijuana is smoked, its effects 
begin immediately after the drug enters the brain and last from one 
to three hours. NIDA also said heavy use of marijuana use can impair 
a person's ability to recall events and, though a user may experience 
pleasant sensations and bright colors and sounds, the user's hands 
may tremble and grow cold, and he or she may feel sleepy or depressed.

Occasionally, use of the drug can produce a range of emotions such as 
fear, anxiety, distrust and panic, as well as an increased heart 
rate, impaired coordination and balance and an increased risk of 
cancer in the head, neck and lungs, NIDA said.

"The bottom line is that using marijuana is illegal and there are 
serious health problems that can be obtained by using it," Jenkot said.

Blum called marijuana a "highly-potent drug targeted straight to the 
brain with immediate effects."

Fisher said the NIDA overstates side effects of marijuana use, one in 
particular being depression.

"Sadly, NIDA doesn't often provide productive footnotes," Fisher said.

Fisher has done studies on marijuana use in Amsterdam and said that 
most people there consume marijuana through eating. This can take 
time for the drug to take affect and when it does, it's only a 
temporary 'high.'

"Alcohol can cause rage and depression as well," Fisher said. "The 
real question is whether or not the side effects are worth taking."

Fisher said it's ultimately up to the user.

"Marijuana won't kill you and doesn't cause any long-term 
psychological damage," he said.

Blum said he always had a certain sympathy for the organization 
because it claimed to be sticking up for people who'd been in prison 
for merely possessing marijuana.

"If what NORML says is true - that using the drug doesn't haven any 
psychological effects - then they're truly reckless and well-beyond 
the scope of their alleged mission," he said.

Although he doesn't know if marijuana use is a marker for criminal 
behavior, it has helped eliminate some criminal risks, Blum said.

"Police who search someone and find marijuana often lead to the 
arrest of some pretty dangerous critters," Blum said. "I think it 
does keep dangerous people off the street."

Curbing the Pain - Legally

There is much heated debated over whether marijuana should be 
legalized for medical patients who could benefit from use of the drug.

Vending machines in Los Angeles provide people suffering from chronic 
illnesses like cancer a valid supply of marijuana. The amount of 
marijuana is limited to an ounce per week and those purchasing the 
drug must have a valid ID, patient fingerprints and doctor's prescription.

As for marijuana use by chronically ill medical patients, Blum said 
the short-term effects of use to reduce nausea can be found in other 
medicines. However, he said he doesn't think it's any better to 
deprive someone who is dying of a potential medicine that can ease 
chronic pain.

"It would be like depriving a dying diabetic of a cookie," Blum said. 
"If they want to smoke it instead of take it as a pill, that's up to 
them. It's not helping their lungs any better though."

Besides a health and social issue, Jenkot said the fight to either 
legalize or keep marijuana illegal is a political issue.

"The government has had its hand in the issue since the beginning," 
Jenkot said. "Keeping it illegal benefits them, as well as the 
pharmaceutical companies.

"As long as the drug is illegal, then you have to go to a pharmacy to 
get your medicine or 'drug.' If marijuana is legalized, then people 
won't be coming to the pharmacy to purchase their drugs or other pain 
medicines."

For Blum, there is plenty of room for negotiation of merely 
possessing the drug. Legalizing the drug, he said, makes it like a 
Hostess Twinkie - a potential mass production on one item.

"I think, unfortunately, that it is an all-or-nothing problem with an 
all-or-nothing approach to fixing that problem," Blum said. "Groups 
like NORML whitewash all adversaries on the drug and they may be 
deceiving you on other areas as well." 
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MAP posted-by: Richard Lake