Pubdate: Sun, 20 Mar 2011 Source: Republican-American (Waterbury, CT) Copyright: 2011 American-Republican Inc. Contact: http://www.rep-am.com/about_us/how_to_reach_us/ Website: http://www.rep-am.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/571 ILL-CONSIDERED MARIJUANA LAWS It never fails to amaze us that the same people who are always saying, "If it saves one life, it's worth it," are unable to see the benefit of laws that ban, albeit imperfectly, behavior that does harm to individuals and to society. Typically, it comes down to partisanship and ideology. Consider the position far-left former lawmaker Michael Lawlor, now a member of Gov. Dannel P. Malloy's inner circle as undersecretary of criminal justice policy and planning, on marijuana laws. Mr. Lawlor says enforcement of current laws does not reduce usage. "If it worked, it would be an entirely different discussion, but it does not appear to work," he said during a legislative committee hearing on marijuana policy March 14. By this logic, laws against homicide should be thrown out because they manifestly don't prevent all murders. The point Mr. Lawlor is missing, or willfully ignoring, is that sanctions suppress harmful behaviors. The fact sanctions suppress those behaviors incompletely does not warrant eliminating the sanctions. For example, a 2005 survey by the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration found about 14 percent of Connecticut residents older than 12 had used marijuana during the previous year. How much higher would that number be if the proposals for decriminalization of possession of small amounts of marijuana were made law? The people who are trying to uproot the law are under obligation to explain why their proposal wouldn't have this socially detrimental effect. They haven't met that obligation. Proponents of "medical marijuana" -- legalization by another name -- likewise ignore the record. In some states where physicians can prescribe marijuana for medical use, unscrupulous doctors turn their practices into prescription mills where anyone with an ache or pain, real or imagined, can buy the stuff legally. Why won't this happen in Connecticut as well? Again, the proponents aren't saying. Instead of wielding documented statistics and credible projections, they roll out a handful of sympathetic victims of disease who believe they've benefited from (necessarily) illicit marijuana use. This is legislation by anecdote. The fact a very few people might actually derive benefit from use of an illegal drug does not justify legalizing that substance for those who might be served just as well by alternative drugs. And it certainly doesn't justify legalizing it, in effect if not in fact, for everyone. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr.