Pubdate: Wed, 23 Feb 2011 Source: Winnipeg Free Press (CN MB) Website: http://mapinc.org/url/F1OW7EXy Copyright: 2011 Winnipeg Free Press Contact: http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/opinion/send_a_letter Website: http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/502 Author: Don Marks Note: Don Marks is a freelance writer from Winnipeg who does not advocate the non-medical use of any drug, including alcohol (now). FINALLY, A CHANCE FOR A CHOICE The federal government is moving towards banning the sale of salvia, a mostly decorative plant that has hallucinogenic properties when it is smoked in one big hit. The public debate is focused on whether the government is taking too much control over people's lives, whether the government is wasting time and money on something that isn't as important as, say, health care and deficits, and whether the government is turning what should be a social concern into a legal problem. But any debate about the non-medical use of drugs always carries a perplexing twist because many of the people who join the debate, and almost all the people who will be responsible for enforcing the ban on salvia, may never have tried the drug themselves, although it's ludicrous to claim that people who haven't tried a drug should not be allowed to contribute to the debate. Proponents of legalizing marijuana have always maintained that politicians and bureaucrats ignore the comparatively more harmful effects that alcohol has on society, while they continue to criminalize marijuana and other drugs. Even marijuana addicts harm mostly just themselves, while the domestic violence, economic loss caused by hangovers and damage to the livers of the land associated with alcoholism are far more costly, but the legal discrepancy continues. Alcohol consumption is a privilege, not a right, and the non-medical use of drugs is rarely a privilege under Canadian law. Nonetheless, Canadians are now faced with the question of whether a drug that most have never even heard of, let alone experienced, should be banned. I have never been shy about admitting that I have tried pretty much every drug at one time or another in my lifetime. It's just my nature. I have reached a point where drugs, even alcohol, have become a thing of the past, but I can comment on salvia, even though hallucinogens are in my very distant past. Some young friends of mine, knowing that I had experimented with drugs such as LSD, mescaline and marijuana during my high school days, introduced me to salvia about three years ago. They wanted to go across the country and film people on salvia and needed an experienced executive producer. I agreed with the notion I should be fully aware of all content that would be going into this production (and carelessly cocky, bragged on about how "this new crap can't compare to the wild trips we used to go on in the '60s.") Unfortunately, it had been so long since I coped with the powerful hallucinogenic properties of psychedelic drugs that I had forgotten coping mechanisms that most of us had developed to "bring ourselves down" before we ended up on some window ledge. I was completely at the mercy of this new, unknown drug. I had taken a full dose, a concentrated hit -- all I could hold in my lungs from a bong. Within 30 seconds, I had to sit down. And for about half an hour (I was told later), my young friends disappeared from the room and I was stripped of all reality. I did not exist. My entire life had been just a dream that was now over. One of my young friends became me when I was 10 years old. One picture hanging on the wall became a row of 100 pictures in a gallery. You get the picture. Eventually, I came down, but I have never had a more powerful psychedelic experience. And that includes acid trips lasting eight hours ("peaking" for two) that I fought through as a teenager. Salvia was a horrific, most unpleasant experience, which I have no desire to repeat. This is how 90 per cent of the people who try salvia feel, according to the scant statistics available. Just like we found with LSD and peyote and other hallucinogens, there is little use for these drugs except by shamans who somehow manage to use them for visions. During the 1960s, they were supposed to provide the benefits of "mind-expanding" experiences, but I can't connect my own experiments with my present state of mind (open, closed or whatever). But since we know we can get high on salvia, we want to ban it. The question remains: Is this the right thing to do? We have a rare opportunity, one that even the 1960s generation has never had. Marijuana, LSD and heroin were either legal or illegal by the time we had to make our choice about them. Do we finally now get the chance to tell government it has no right to tell us what we can or cannot put into our own bodies? Some people claim we will encourage the use of salvia by making it illegal (and somehow more mysterious and exciting). Will we take the profits from the sale of salvia from taxpaying gardening and head shops and turn control of it over to uncontrollable gangs? The major debate is always about taking a social problem and turning it into a criminal one. Do we really want to jail kids who are experimenting, trying new challenges, finding out for themselves, like all kids do? I found out the hard way. But I won't try salvia again. Just like I don't do acid or even marijuana. There are no easy answers, but I hope I have helped the people who have never experienced salvia understand the issue a bit better. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt