Pubdate: Thu, 12 Aug 2010 Source: Nanaimo News Bulletin (CN BC) Copyright: 2010 Amiee Gravell Contact: http://www.nanaimobulletin.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/948 Author: Amiee Gravell Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v10/n609/a09.html GAMBLING, POT USE NOT COMPARABLE To the Editor, Re: If gambling is good, why not legalize pot? Guest Comment, July 27. While I understand completely the rationalization between linking prohibition of pot to the hypocrisy of government-endorsed online gambling (while running voluntary self-exclusion programs for in-person gambling), I do not feel that is the best method to highlight the argument. Pot should be legalized for a host of reasons, most of which the writer touched upon: reducing organized crime, the repeated failures of the war on drugs to be anything but a war on the poor, harm reduction, and the myths and complete fallacies perpetuated by uninformed officials. I don't support using yet another example of something that truly is bad being legalized/supported as a reason for why something that truly isn't bad should not be illegal. The reason is only that it does not properly get the message across to people who aren't already singing in our choir. I would love for our government's online gambling ring to get shut down immediately, or at the very least, refuse credit card payments. I see it as promoting a real and devastating addiction and making it easier for people to dig themselves into debt they can't get out of and suffer under high interest rates on credit cards. I'm sure credit card companies love this online gambling business. Pot is not the same. You can't buy pot on a credit card, so you aren't going to wake up one day and find yourself in debt. It is not addictive to anyone that doesn't have problems that would have them addicted to anything that made them feel good (watching TV, junk food, food in general - anything can be addictive to someone in the right circumstance). Pot is not physically addictive. Arguing pot's legalization on the basis of continuity groups it with things that are truly bad - gambling, alcohol, cigarettes - and is easy for someone who doesn't support gambling or smoking to say that all of these things should be illegal or at least made difficult to engage in. Pot is not the same. Long-time heavy pot users don't suffer the health deterioration as do long-time alcoholics; pot can be ingested in many ways other than smoking that makes the comparison between cigarette-caused cancer and pot-caused cancer moot; and no human being can smoke thousands of dollars worth of pot in a day the same way you could blow thousands of dollars at an online casino. Trying to group these things together as if they are at all similar is an attempt to appeal to people who don't think pot should be legalized, but I think it hurts as much or more than it helps. It perpetuates the myth that pot is a societal ill, rather than trying to shed light on how pot is not a societal ill. Amiee Gravell Nanaimo - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D