Pubdate: Wed, 20 Oct 2010 Source: USA Today (US) Page: 8A Copyright: 2010 USA TODAY, a division of Gannett Co. Inc Contact: http://mapinc.org/url/625HdBMl Website: http://www.usatoday.com/printedition/news/index.htm Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/466 Cited: Proposition 19 http://yeson19.com/ Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/opinion.htm (Opinion) Bookmark: http://mapinc.org/find?272 (Proposition 19) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?261 (Cannabis - United States) Bookmark: http://mapinc.org/find?258 (Holder, Eric) IF CALIFORNIA GOES TO POT, REST OF U.S. GETS DRAGGED IN Supporters of legalizing marijuana make interesting arguments about respecting adults' personal liberty, choking off a major source of drug cartel profits, and saving law enforcement resources for higher priorities. Interesting, but not enough, in our view, to offset the even more compelling reasons why voters in trend-setting California would be wise to reject legalization when they go to the polls Nov. 2. Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger recently signed a law making possession of up to an ounce of marijuana equal to a traffic ticket, but if Proposition 19 passed - and polls suggest it has a decent chance - California would go even further. It would be legal for adults to possess, smoke and grow pot for recreational purposes. What's the harm? More than you might suspect. One key problem is that California, or any other state, can't fully "legalize" marijuana. It would still be an illegal substance under federal law, and Attorney General Eric Holder said last week that he'd make it a priority to arrest and prosecute violators. Not individual users, most likely, but people who tried to grow or sell it in large quantities. Nor would the impact of legalization be confined to the Golden State. A RAND Corp. study suggests that legalizing California crops would slash the cost of pot from some $300-$400 an ounce to as little as a tenth of that, potentially flooding the rest of the nation with cheap supplies and driving up use. Even some Californians sympathetic to the idea of legalization worry that Prop 19 is a flawed vehicle. It would empower the state's hundreds of city and county governments to set their own regulations for growing, selling, using and taxing marijuana. That, as most of the state's leading newspapers have pointed out in editorials opposing the ballot measure, is a recipe for regulatory chaos. More worrisome than tangled bureaucracy, though, are concerns about what legalizing another intoxicant besides alcohol could do to public safety and health. Anti-pot crusaders dating to the days of Reefer Madness wrecked their credibility by insisting marijuana was as pernicious as heroin and other far more dangerous drugs. It's not, but it's not harmless, either. Growers have managed to make stronger strains over the years, and some are powerful enough to induce a blissful sort of catatonia, at least temporarily. You wouldn't want someone in that state or even a milder one coming toward you on the road, and while it would still be illegal to drive under the influence, that would almost certainly happen more often under legalization. Marijuana smokers are three times more likely than sober drivers to crash. Our deepest concern is what would happen to children. Supporters of legalization underestimate how easy it would be for kids to sneak pot at home if their parents began using it more frequently and openly, and the legalizers fail to reckon with the danger of sending children the message that pot is no big deal. Marijuana is less addictive than harder drugs, but the addiction rate jumps as high as 17% for kids who begin using at an early age, and early use can sharply set back a child's mental development. There continues to be a legitimate role for medicinal marijuana, which can ease pain and suffering in some seriously ill people and is legal in California and 13 other states. In California, though, getting a doctor's permission to buy legal pot is so easy that it has become a back door for broad legalization, which risks creating a backlash against the drug's compassionate use. Eventually, there might be a national movement toward legalizing marijuana, but the key word is "national." Legalization is a decision that should be made by the entire country, not just one state, and only after carefully weighing all the very real downside