Pubdate: Tue, 17 Feb 2009 Source: Aurora, The (CN NF) Copyright: 2009 The Aurora Contact: http://www.theaurora.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3219 Author: Pam Morrissey Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?420 (Cannabis - Popular) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/michael+phelps ILLEGAL MEANS ILLEGAL, PERIOD Weed smokers beware. You aren't going to like what I have say, so stop reading now. The rest of you, continue. It's been a few weeks since Olympic gold medalist Michael Phelps made international headlines after a photo of him allegedly inhaling some kind of 'natural' substance surfaced on the Internet, and reaction has been swift. My own included. Phelps was the boy wonder of the Beijing Games winning a record eight gold medals as a swimmer and inspiring millions of people worldwide with his carefree buoyant attitude. He must have been on top of the world, and no doubt the whole world was gazing up at him. I wasn't one of those who put him on a pedestal, so my heart wasn't hurt when I heard the news, but I was disappointed. I couldn't believe an athlete of his calibre and presumably at the top of his game would do something so stupid. And it was stupid. Marijuana is an illegal substance. Period. That's it. There's no room for debate. The facts are the facts. An eight-time Olympic gold medalist was caught smoking weed - albeit in a photograph - but he doesn't deny it, and he's apologized for the 'regrettable behaviour.' It's wrong. Now these kinds of stories always bring the pot lovers out of the woodwork, and it opens up the years-old argument of weed vs. alcohol and legal vs. illegal. Marijuana users are quick to take up the torch defending their choice to toke up, immediately pointing to the studies that prove weed is better than alcohol. And they may have a point. Personally I don't care. And I don't give a hoot about whether you think it should be legal either. There are sound arguments for it - I've heard a lot of them - and it may indeed make the whole process of lighting up safer, but I just don't buy it. Call me old-fashioned, call me a prude, call me judgmental: sticks and stones may break my bones, but words will never hurt me. I'm not a drug user. I never will be. And I will fight tooth and nail to ensure my kids aren't either, which means I will forever be an advocate of keeping weed - a drug that muddles the brain no matter what people claim - in the illegal category. As far as I'm concerned, there is no place for those arguments in this case anyway. The point is Phelps made a mistake. He's taken the figurative fall from grace - sponsors are starting to distance themselves from the Olympian, he's been suspended from USA Swimming for three months - and I think it's the least he should expect. Police in South Carolina - where Phelps was photographed with the bong - - have started investigating the case, and while I don't expect any real charges, I think it's important to go through the motions. He doesn't deserve special treatment just because he's an American hero; he isn't above the law. As for the International Olympic Committee and its decision to stand behind Phelps, the group should be ashamed. I'm not suggesting the athlete be berated and beaten on the public stage, but there should be some consequences for this kind of behaviour. The IOC has taken the position that it happened outside of the Olympic Games, so it isn't a problem - let's see how true that will be during the next Olympics. The organization is setting a dangerous precedent by saying it's OK to smoke up as long as you aren't competing and it could potentially tarnish the good name of the Games. Phelps is supposed to be a role model. He's supposed to embody the spirit of athleticism, and represent everything good about sports. I wonder how those athletes who aren't doing drugs feel about that. I wonder how different reaction to this story would have been if he was caught during the Games. I wonder how many kids will light up this year because their hero did it too. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin