Pubdate: Wed, 04 Jul 2012 Source: North County Times (Escondido, CA) Copyright: 2012 North County Times Contact: http://www.nctimes.com/app/forms/letters/index.php Website: http://www.nctimes.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1080 Author: Thomas K. Arnold THE PERILS OF POT AGAIN The story in yesterday's paper about the 3-year-old Murrieta boy who was hospitalized after he ate an "undisclosed amount" of a relative's medical marijuana supply made this anti-pothead's blood boil. The last time I wrote a column on the perils of marijuana ---- and on the sham I believe the whole medical marijuana movement is ---- I received all sorts of angry comments, not just in this newspaper but also on my personal Facebook page, from people who essentially argued that alcohol is a far worse problem than marijuana. I agree ---- alcohol is a much bigger problem than pot. Drunken drivers cause far more accidents and deaths than drivers who are stoned, chronic alcohol abuse leads to all sorts of health conditions and premature death, and booze costs us as a society many more billions of dollars than all illegal drugs combined, when you factor in treatment costs, health-related costs, productivity losses and other "human capital" expenses. But ---- and this is a very big "but" ---- one reason alcohol wreaks so much more havoc on society is that its use is far more widespread than that of marijuana or other drugs. And that, dear reader, is largely a function of the fact that alcohol is legal, while marijuana and other drugs are not. Heck, I'd venture to say french fries and Big Macs cost society more in health care and other human-capital expenses than marijuana, cocaine or even heroin, for the very same reason: Products that are legal tend to be much more widely used than products that are not. That's why I oppose attempts to legalize drugs. Sure, taking pot and other drugs off the black market would certainly reduce crime, but the impact on our society, I fear, would be deadly. Say what you will about booze ---- it's the only so-called "drug" (and I lump cigarettes into that category, as well) that, if used sparingly, has no negative affect on one's health, and may even be beneficial. Supporters of medical marijuana say pot, too, can be beneficial, helping cancer patients, for example, overcome nausea and pain. But it merely masks the symptoms; it doesn't heal anything. I have no qualms about a doctor prescribing marijuana to a cancer patient who can't eat, or is in terrible pain. But I do have a problem with how easy it is for the average Joe to obtain a medical marijuana card and use it to buy pot at legally sanctioned marijuana dispensaries, simply to get high. In the Murrieta case, we have a 3-year-old child who became gravely ill after ingesting medical marijuana legally obtained by his grandmother. But Granny didn't keep her pot locked up in a medicine cabinet; according to published reports, she used it to bake chocolate-chip cookies that the little boy simply couldn't resist. We've all heard the old Mary Poppins song about how a "spoonful of sugar makes the medicine go down ... in a most delightful way." But in this case, it was an innocent little child who went down ---- and that's just plain wrong as can be. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom