Pubdate: Mon, 20 Apr 2009 Source: Daily Reveille (Louisiana State U, LA Edu) Copyright: 2009 Daily Reveille Contact: http://www.lsureveille.com/submit_a_letter Website: http://www.lsureveille.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2879 Author: Matthew Albright NIETZSCHE IS DEAD: SORRY, STUDENTS, MARIJUANA SHOULD STILL BE ILLEGAL Marijuana is bad. On this most auspicious of days, the calls for legalizing marijuana reach their wheezing, coughing climax. And year after year, these calls go unanswered for good reason. As much as we want to think our parents are over-protective and paranoid, there's a reason they always told us not to smoke pot, and there's a reason pot is still illegal. Marijuana smoke contains 20 times more ammonia and five times more hydrogen cyanide and nitrogen oxide than tobacco smoke, according to the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration. The drug also doubles the risk of depression and triples the incidence of suicidal thoughts, according to Life Science Weekly. Contrary to some arguments, marijuana has been connected with criminal activity - four out of every five repeat felons has a history of drug use. It's use contributes to vast social problems south of the border - the anarchic violence in Mexico a potent example. Despite the dangers pot poses, some propose arguments that cast the drug in a good light, but virtually all of them are totally baseless. The first - and most tired argument - is that marijuana is useful for medicinal purposes. Although the jury is still out to some extent on tightly-regulated medical marijuana, it is most definitively in on legalization. The Institute of Medicine, the American Medical Association and the Mayo Clinic have all made public statements against legalization. Besides, medicinal marijuana already exists in pill form as Marinol. The second argument is that legalization would free up space in overcrowded jails. This also has no basis in fact. Only 5 percent of inmates in federal prison and about 27 percent of state prison are incarcerated for drug-related charges, according to the DEA. Another argument is drug-related violence would decrease with legalization. But this assumes violence is a result of conflicts resulting from trafficking - instead, most drug-related crimes are committed by those on drugs, not those seeking them. A user on drugs is six times as likely to commit violent crimes as an addict looking to obtain them, according to the DEA. Proponents argue legalization of marijuana will eliminate the dangerous and violent black market involved in its distribution. But this market will exist with or without drug laws. If marijuana is legalized, an apparatus would have to be constructed to regulate its distribution. High maintenance costs for this apparatus aside, pure-grade marijuana would almost certainly not be allowed - thus a black market would exist for these drugs anyway. And don't forget all the drugs that would certainly sustain a black market. The final myth legalization advocates advance is that legalization will not lead to a significant increase in marijuana use. This is patently untrue. Legalization has been tried before - Alaska voted to legalize it in the 1970s, and the drug's use among teens doubled. In fact, marijuana caused enough problems for the state to re-criminalize it in 1990. Although many college students would love to see marijuana legalized, and many students have turned the search for evidence that it is not harmful into a personal crusade, the hard facts indicate one simple truth. Marijuana is bad. And it always will be. - --------------- Matthew Albright is a 20-year-old political communications sophomore from Baton Rouge. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart