Pubdate: Wed, 18 Sep 2013 Source: Daily Sentinel, The (Grand Junction, CO) Copyright: 2013 Cox Newspapers, Inc. Contact: http://www.gjsentinel.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2084 Author: Diane Cox Note: Title by newshawk SHINY NEW SCHOOLS The Grand Junction City Council made a wise decision in joining Mesa County in just saying "no" to marijuana retail shops. The tax revenues the drug dealers have promised to share with us to build "shiny new schools" won't benefit students whose brains have been fried on marijuana. A 20-year study recently published and printed in The Daily Sentinel revealed that an average high school student smoking pot once a week for one year dropped his or her IQ from the 50th percentile down to the 29th. This should not surprise us, since marijuana has been hybridized since the '70s from 1 percent THC levels (hallucinogens) to 30 percent or more today. Even Amsterdam classifies anything more than 15 percent as a hard drug. Police Chief John Camper told the council that any behavior you normalize becomes more widespread. Sadly, we have seen this come true with the sharp increase in marijuana expulsions in Colorado high schools since medical marijuana dispensaries opened several years ago. The "strict" regulations for dispensaries did little to stem that, and neither will the new regulations. Councilman Bennett Boechenstein said he was eager to see how it worked for Denver (the only city so far to allow retail shops) and to revisit the issue. He might want to consider how it worked in Alaska after that state legalized pot in the 1970s and its teen drug abuse doubled in a few years. Voters had the good sense to reverse the law. How can we continue social experiments with our most precious resource - our youth? DIANE COX Palisade - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom