Pubdate: Thu, 10 Sep 2009 Source: East Tennessean, The (TN Edu) Copyright: 2009 The East Tennessean Contact: http://www.easttennessean.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2823 Author: Trey West GATEWAY-DRUG THEORY NOT SUPPORTED BY FACTS Growing up, most college students attended some form of D.A.R.E (Drug Abuse Resistance Education) program. D.A.R.E defines a gateway drug as "a drug that can potentially open the door to the use of other harder drugs." That is according to "The Official Parent Guide," constructed by Glenn Levant and actively used and promoted by the D.A.R.E program. Marijuana is considered one of the gateway drugs. It does recognize that both cigarettes and alcohol are part of that theory as well. "Marijuana is a gateway drug. In drug law enforcement, rarely do we meet heroin or cocaine addicts who did not start their drug use with marijuana," according to Karen Tandy of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency. Tandy does not mention that virtually everyone using cannabis tried cigarettes and alcohol first. It is not necessarily cigarettes and alcohol driving for harder drug use; although, even the most ardent prohibitionist should argue that the correlations sequentially between them should make both of them illegal according to the gateway theory. Only to be fair, of course. Personally, I think the gateway theory does exist to some extent. Although, if marijuana were legal, the buyer would not have a reason to associate with black-market distributors, thus narrowing access to any other drugs, even if the person wants to buy them. The Netherlands Institute of Mental Health and Addiction reported that allowing the sale of marijuana to be regulated by licensed distributors rather than by criminal entrepreneurs who will most likely have the harder drugs when out of the popular herb, would substantially curb harder drug use. The likelihood of people actually going to these entrepreneurs will also decrease rapidly. Once prohibited, alcohol is now flourishing with over $130 billion in profit per year. In short, it's the prohibition of marijuana that is sending people to places in search of marijuana, where hard drugs are readily available when the bud isn't. A recent confrontation over the subject of marijuana's legal status between Rep. Steve Cohen of Tennessee and FBI Director Robert Mueller was aired on CNN News. Cohen asked Mueller to explain why the government hasn't considered separating the legal status of marijuana's from that of heroin and cocaine. He continued with stating facts, one being that there were no deaths due to the influence of cannabis while driving. Mueller astonished Congress when he had the audacity to say, "If you talk to parents that have lost children to drugs, they will inevitably say that they started off with marijuana." Cohen disputed this claim immediately and embarrassed Mueller by saying, "No, they started off with milk, then went to beer . The gateway theory doesn't work here. It's a reality." The astonished and perplexed expression on Mueller's face spoke volumes. Muellerr had no concept of marijuana and its benefits. Marijuana is a plant that contains the most durable fiber on the planet. You would think the FBI director would have facts to present the case of the plant's illegality. Sadly, none arose at anytime. Whether one consumes marijuana or not, is a choice that is made by that person, much like the same choice you made when you turned 18 to smoke cigarettes. Think about it. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr