Pubdate: Fri, 31 Jul 2009 Source: Florida Times-Union (FL) Copyright: 2009 The Florida Times-Union Contact: http://www.jacksonville.com/tu-online/opinion/letters_policy.shtml Website: http://www.jacksonville.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/155 Author: Drew Edwards MARIJUANA: ONE WAY TO MOVE DOWN IN LIFE A study published in 2007 by the medical journal Addiction confirms what many of us have observed for years. People who regularly smoke marijuana grossly underachieve in life. This breakthrough research studied the progress of approximately 1,900 teens for 10 years, and found that regular marijuana users were three times more likely to be unemployed or drop out of school than nonusers. The evidence of marijuana's negative effect on young people is so overwhelming that the scientist who conducted the research pronounced that marijuana is "the drug for life's future losers." Young people who have the intelligence and motivation to go to college or technical school and begin smoking marijuana almost always abandon these aspirations for something less rigorous. The research is clear regarding marijuana's effect on the brain and behavior. Cannabis impairs memory, motivation and something called executive functioning, which involves the ability to organize tasks, control impulses and set priorities. In other words, most marijuana users adjust their life's goals and priorities downward to accommodate their impaired condition. It's hard to smoke weed three to four times per week and remain disciplined enough to get up early, think clearly enough and work hard enough to attain the grades and skill necessary to succeed in something difficult. Marijuana users are frequently unemployed or underemployed in vocations that are less challenging. Additionally, because the genetically engineered cannabis is so potent, its use is now associated with early-onset psychosis, and is now a risk factor for schizophrenia, depression and anxiety disorders. This is irrefutable in the current medical literature. The cost to an individual and our collective economic productivity as a result of marijuana's debilitating physical and mental effects are devastating. The bottom line is that decriminalizing marijuana will result in more mental illness, more addiction and more uneducated and unemployable persons. We simply cannot afford this. Drew Edwards, executive director, Ennoble Foundation, Jacksonville - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake