Pubdate: Thu, 3 Dec 2009 Source: Lake County Record-Bee (Lakeport, CA) Copyright: 2009 Record-Bee Contact: http://www.record-bee.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3384 Author: Katy Sweeny, Record-Bee Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/opinion.htm (Opinion) Off the Deep End THE DANGEROUS SIDE OF MARIJUANA Marijuana is not a harmless drug. The environment, the smoker and people suffer because of the seemingly accepted drug. Years ago in my hometown of Galt, a man and his two sons were hunting on their property and walked into a marijuana garden. The growers shot and killed the man and his almost teenage son. They let the young boy go. A Lake County Fish and Wildlife Advisory Committee meeting addressed the effects of growing marijuana Nov. 19. Matt Knudsen, special agent for the Bureau of Land Management, told the crowd about what he finds when he cleans marijuana gardens after growers leave. "There's a weapon in every single marijuana grow I've been to," Knudsen said. "The public needs to be aware in the woods where they're at." I've heard many people say "Nobody's ever died from weed." Yes, people have. Innocent people die over marijuana. People involved in growing and trading the drug also die and suffer. Three people allegedly broke into a Lakeport man's home behind the Record-Bee building in October and stole his 10 marijuana plants, officials reported. They then hogtied, tortured and shot him, leaving him for dead. He lived. I don't know whether those charged are guilty and why the intruders hurt the man. What I do know is that marijuana isn't safe for just about anyone. This is an issue of illegally grown, sold and used marijuana, not the usefulness of medical marijuana. Some people get euphoric off the drug. But marijuana use can cause short-term distorted perceptions, memory impairment and difficulty thinking and solving problems, according to the National Institute on Drug Abuse. Personally, I'd rather not reduce my ability to remember, think and problem solve. The drug also impairs learning, the ability to focus attention and coordination. It also increases heart rate, can harm the lungs and can cause psychosis in those at risk. Merriam-Webster's Medical Dictionary defines psychosis as a serious mental disorder, such as schizophrenia, characterized by defective or lost contact with reality often with hallucinations or delusions. The possible effects don't seem worth the high. Law enforcement officers have eradicated more marijuana plants in Lake County than anywhere else in the state during the past three years, officials said at the November meeting on environmental impacts of growing marijuana. Growers bring EPA-banned fertilizers into California from Mexico that are toxic to humans and animals, Knudsen said. The fertilizers then pollute streams, which is hard to reverse. Not only do marijuana grows pollute the land with toxic fertilizers and trash, but they use natural resources. The average marijuana plant consumes three to five gallons of water per plant per day, Knudsen said. With a 5,000-plant garden and a 90-day life cycle, the average garden consumes three to five million gallons of water. I would rather divert those gallons of water to growers of fruits, vegetables and dairy farmers. I have plenty of environmentally and health conscious friends and acquaintances who drink out of Klean Kanteens, eat organic products but still smoke marijuana. Conscientiousness needs to be encompassing. I won't argue that all my decisions are for the better of the world and myself, but I choose not to take part in marijuana use. Marijuana is the most commonly abused substance in the United States, according to the National Institute on Drug Abuse. If people care about the environment, themselves and other people, they won't buy, grow or use illicit marijuana. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake