Pubdate: Sun, 21 Aug 2011 Source: Tennessean, The (Nashville, TN) Copyright: 2011 The Tennessean Contact: http://www.tennessean.com/SITES/OPINION/submit-editor.shtml Website: http://www.tennessean.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/447 Author: David Mineta Note: David Mineta is deputy director for demand reduction in the Office of National Drug Control Policy in Washington. MOVEMENT FOR LEGALIZED MARIJUANA IGNORES DANGERS Proponents of marijuana legalization often argue it will do everything from fixing our economy to ending violent crime ("Marijuana legalization bill offers safer alternative," Tennessee Voices, Aug. 15). Yet, the science is clear: Marijuana use is not a benign drug and it is harmful to public health and safety. Decades of scientific study, including research from the prestigious National Institutes of Health, show marijuana use is associated with addiction, treatment admissions among young people, fatal drugged driving accidents, and visits to emergency rooms. Data also reveal that marijuana potency has almost tripled in the past 20 years. This is especially troubling for use among teens because the earlier a person begins to use drugs, the more likely they are to develop a more serious abuse and addiction problem later in life. Would marijuana legalization make Tennessee healthier or safer? One needs to look no further than Tennessee's current painful experience with prescription drug abuse. In Tennessee, prescription drugs are legal, regulated, and taxed - and yet rates of the abuse of pain relievers in the state exceed the national average by more than 10 percent. Nationally, someone dies from an unintentional drug overdose - driven in large part by prescription drug abuse - on average every 19 minutes. What would America look like if we had just as many people using marijuana as we currently have smoking cigarettes, abusing alcohol, and abusing prescription drugs? The bottom line is that laws that control substances have had a real and lasting effect on keeping drug use rates relatively low. They keep prices higher which helps hold use rates relatively low. Moreover, other addictive substances like alcohol and tobacco, which are already legal and taxed, cost much more in social costs than the revenue they generate. This isn't to say that we believe we can arrest our way out of our nation's drug problem. In fact, President Obama's new National Drug Control Strategy emphasizes drug education, treatment and innovative criminal justice programs, like the Davidson County Drug Court run by Judge Seth Norman, which diverts hundreds of nonviolent drug offenders into treatment instead of prison. Another example is Tennessee's The Next Door program, which reduces recidivism among women by helping them stay off drugs and transition back into society after incarceration. These kinds of evidence-based approaches to drug control are vital to reducing drug use and its consequences in communities across Tennessee. Marijuana legalization would be disastrous public health policy, because it would increase availability and increase the use of a substance that we know to be harmful. Decades of experience have shown that there are no "silver bullet" approaches to addressing our national drug problem. We hope you'll join us in educating every new generation of young people about the harms of drug use and how it can endanger their ability to live to their full potential. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr.