Pubdate: Sun, 22 Apr 2012 Source: Reporter, The (Vacaville, CA) Contact: 2012 The Reporter Website: http://www.thereporter.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/472 Author: Fred Doran MARIJUANA FALLOUT HIGH Ernest Kimme's column ("Time to end war on drugs,", April 17) causes reason for concern. Mr. Kimme takes a position that legalization and taxation of highly psychoactive chemicals is a reasonable way to help balance our state's budget. While I understand the basis for his position of legalizing drugs for tax purposes -- people just want to get high and we should tax them for the privilege -- I disagree with that position. Mr. Kimme wrote nothing about the bad that marijuana has done to individual lives or to families who have been severely affected by marijuana abuse and addiction. And, of course, there was no mention of the obvious negative effects marijuana use has on the development of our youth or that marijuana, for many, ushered in the use of other drugs, such as cocaine, methamphetamine, ecstasy or LSD. His comments primarily concentrated on the cost of the war on drugs and how much money we can make off legalizing another vice. In California, marijuana is second only to amphetamines as the primary drug used by those persons admitted to treatment for drug abuse or addiction, and the number of persons listing marijuana as their primary drug of abuse is far above the number of persons seeking treatment for alcohol abuse or addiction. In 2011, more than 30,000 Californians sought treatment for problems related to marijuana abuse or addiction. Not surprisingly, about 75 percent of those persons seeking treatment for marijuana addiction fell in the 21 years and under category, and of those, more than 50 percent fell into the 17 years and under category. What have we done to our youth? There are faces attached to the issues raised in the discussion about the legalization of marijuana. Those are NOT the faces of Benjamin Franklin or Andrew Jackson or any other past president represented on our currency; those faces are of our children, grandchildren, brothers, sisters, friends and neighbors. I obviously know there are some members of our community who, for a fistful of dollars, are willing to encourage others into drug abuse and addiction through the legalization of highly psychoactive chemicals, but I believe the majority of us would not wish to see anyone in the grip of a drug-related disease. The war on drug abuse will be won only on an individual basis in our homes, schools and churches through treatment and education, but the war on drug dealers must be fought by our federal, state and local law enforcement and must be fought in a fervent manner. It is infantile to believe legalizing drugs will stop gangs from killing each other or innocent persons, and equally infantile to believe organized crime and drug trafficking organizations will stop pumping thousands of pounds of drugs into our state once a tax stamp is affixed to a Zip Lock bag. A quote from Confucius: "The gentleman understands what is right, whereas the petty man understands profit." Fred Doran Vacaville - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom