Pubdate: Thu, 16 Dec 2010 Source: Courier, The (LA) Copyright: 2010 Houma Today Contact: http://www.houmatoday.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1477 GIVE KIDS ALTERNATIVES TO MARIJUANA More teenagers these days are smoking marijuana. That troubling word comes out of the most recent Monitoring the Future Survey, which was released earlier this week. One in 16 10th-through 12th-graders are smoking marijuana daily or nearly daily, according to the report. And, for the second straight year, the study found that more 12th-graders had smoked marijuana than had smoked tobacco cigarettes within the past three months. Perhaps even more disturbing than the actual number of kids using marijuana is the indication that more teens look favorably at the drug than has been the case in the past. Some government officials, as well as the lead investigator, blamed the trend in teens looking differently at marijuana on the fact that medical-marijuana use has gotten so much attention in recent years. "Young people are increasingly seeing marijuana as not dangerous," said lead researcher Lloyd Johnston of the University of Michigan. That fact, he said, is likely to lead to even heavier use of the drug in the future. The increased use of marijuana has impacts that can reach beyond the criminal effects of buying or possessing it. Scientists say marijuana use can inhibit memory and learning. Those qualities are especially important in teens, who are laying the foundations for their future academic and occupational lives. They could also be damaging brains that have not yet fully developed, researchers said. Meanwhile, advocates for legalizing marijuana pointed to the results as proof that the government's attempts to stigmatize and criminalize the drug have failed to prevent its use. The political arguments here are not as important as the fact that increasing numbers of our young people are putting their futures in jeopardy by using illegal drugs. What is the answer? There is no easy one, but there are answers. Our teens need reasons to stay off drugs, and they need viable alternatives. Kids who are involved in sports or other extracurricular activities at school have a reason to keep their records clean and a reason to stay away from harmful influences. Kids who have active parental involvement in their lives will probably have a tougher time hiding illicit drug use from those who care most about them. And those who are surrounded by positive role models will have good influences rather than bad and a voice of reason that might talk them out of harmful choices. Whatever the numbers and trends say, you can help the teens around you make their own way if you do your part. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D