Pubdate: Mon, 31 Oct 2011 Source: Chicago Tribune (IL) Copyright: 2011 Chicago Tribune Company Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/IuiAC7IZ Website: http://www.chicagotribune.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/82 Author: Peter Bensinger MARIJUANA LEGALIZATION WOULD BE HARMFUL In Steve Chapman's commentary ("On weed: Dazed and confused no more" Oct. 27), he argues for legalization of marijuana and says that drug enforcement has not worked, but he disregards the facts. He mentions Jimmy Carter's comments about reducing penalties. I served as the Administrator of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration during the Ford, Carter and Reagan administrations and penalties for marijuana sales under Carter were increased, and the Asset Forfeiture Law passed, allowing seizure of assets derived from illegal drug deals. More importantly, in 1978, 25.4 million Americans used illegal drugs, 11 percent of our population (225 million); in 2009, there were 22 million, 7 percent (of 305 million). So don't tell us drug laws have not worked. Yes, millions use marijuana; our highway accidents tell that story. A report in Epidemiolgic Reviews titled, "Marijuana and Motor Vehicle Crashes," documents that using marijuana puts an individual at a significantly higher risk of causing motor vehicle crashes, twice as many as non-marijuana users. Legalize marijuana? Highways become far more dangerous and so will workplaces. Alcohol leaves the body at the rate of one drink an hour; marijuana stays in the body/brain for days, even weeks if used regularly. Employers use drug tests to screen employees. Now what would they do? Hire employees high on pot that will have higher accidents, absenteeism and disciplinary problems. Research proves that would happen. The Gallup Poll says one out of two people favor legalization. The public doesn't know the facts. They do not know that marijuana, with 468 different chemicals, has much higher cancer causing agents and tar than tobacco cigarettes. The FDA, the World Health Organization and The American Cancer Society have concluded that smoking marijuana is neither safe nor effective. Science provides persuasive evidence that legalization would be a terrible mistake for our children, families, industry, transportation, health care and society. The science on marijuana needs to reach the public so it can be truly informed. - -- Peter Bensinger, former Administrator of U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration, Chicago - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom