Pubdate: Sat, 24 Mar 2012
Source: Marblehead Reporter (MA)
Copyright: 2012 GateHouse Media, Inc.
Contact:  http://www.wickedlocal.com/marblehead/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3395
Author: Stephen Sloss
Referenced : http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v12/n182/a07.html

MARIJUANA WON'T SATISFY

Marblehead - Why does Marblehead need legalized marijuana? ("Bill to 
legalize marijuana gets local boost," Marblehead Reporter, March 15-21)

If the main goal for most users is to get high, why is Marblehead, 
with all its advantages, its fine homes, high salaries, beautiful 
scenery, so lacking in fulfillment that a majority of its voting 
residents and their local rep think we need to be artificially 
induced to be fleetingly happy in an acrid smoke-filled haze?

And don't forget the "revenue upside." When the state needs money, we 
get a state-sponsored lottery and, when then that's not enough, 
state-licensed gambling casinos. We're maxing out the sin taxes on 
cigarettes and alcohol, so let's legalize grass and tax that, too. Is 
there anything the least bit cynical in the state making money the 
more we smoke, drink, gamble and toke?

To sooth our consciences, we are falsely told in both the story and 
related editorial that our children will not be impacted. Aside from 
the obvious bad example that adults deal with their problems or 
worries by getting high, children are directly affected by smoking in 
their homes and cars. This is a no-brainer. If their parents smoke 
pot around them then they will smoke pot, too. In our brave new 
world, even babies could be stoned because Mom was tokin' while 
changing the diaper. But we want our pot, so let's not worry about that.

And what are we to make of the accomplished scientist's facetious 
analogy that marijuana is no more likely to lead to broader drug use 
than drinking milk is to lead to alcohol consumption? Perhaps the 
slogan for our new legal marijuana should be "Got Grass?"

As I write this, the morning news tells the tragic story of a Salem 
mother who has slit the throats of her two children and set their 
apartment on fire. A pregnant Melrose woman has been killed in a 
Florida cabana by an errant driver. It can be harsh world, and the 
temptation to seek respite in artificial escape and temporary relief 
can be understood in that context. Is it the government's highest 
role to offer us a taxed drug to take our minds off the pain of a 
broken world? Is that all we can look forward to when the world falls 
short of expectations?

Back in 1969, my generation camped out in Woodstock, smoked pot and 
sang, "We've got to get ourselves back to the garden" and for a few 
days dreamed of a better, simpler life, one of "peace and love." 
Thirty years later at Woodstock 1999, their descendents burned 12 
truck trailers and pelted responding firefighters with stones. Where 
is the love?

Why did the majority of voters in a 2010 nonbinding referendum 
instruct our rep to vote to legalize the use of pot? What haven't 
they found in their nice homes, cars, jobs, club memberships, boats, 
vacations, marriages, gifted children and several fine alcohol 
outlets that would make pot superfluous? Beyond the beautiful facade, 
is something missing? Are we looking for love in all the wrong places?

Perhaps the approaching high Jewish and Christian holidays of 
Passover and Easter offer a chance for reflection on a better way to 
a satisfying life than legalizing and taxing more and more "vices." 
It is doubtful that we can legalize, tax and drug our way to true 
happiness. One need only consider the government in Aldous Huxley's 
"Brave New World," which provides the drug Soma to all its citizens 
to suppress questions about the quality of their empty lives.

In the Passover story, God calls to his people living a harsh life of 
slavery in Egypt to mark their doorframes with the blood of a lamb so 
that the angel of death will "pass over" their homes.

Many years later, that same God, in love, sends his son as a similar 
sacrificial lamb so that that his death on a wooden cross would pay 
the price for and lift the judgment from a believer's previously 
self-focused life.

Maybe this craving for marijuana is just the ache of a people who 
have lost their place in a beautiful garden, Eden, where there was 
only peace and harmony and who have been waylaid by a world that all 
too frequently offers war, want, pain and disappointment and an 
illusory promise of happiness by choking on the smoke of a plant.

The Woodstock Generation had it partially right when they sang, 
"We've got to get ourselves back to the garden." But the ancient 
wisdom says you can't get yourself back to the garden. You have to 
depend on the Easter story and the one who paid the price and stands 
waiting at the door for you to open it by faith so that he may come 
in. This is the Easter Story. It is not bitter and temporary like 
marijuana. It is enduring and true. Don't be fooled into accepting 
false substitutes.

Stephen Sloss, Haley Road
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom