Pubdate: Fri, 10 Jan 2014 Source: Calgary Herald (CN AB) Copyright: 2014 Canwest Publishing Inc. Contact: http://www.calgaryherald.com/opinion/letters/letters-to-the-editor.html Website: http://www.calgaryherald.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/66 Author: Naomi Lakritz CANADA DOESN'T NEED TO BE A NATION OF POTHEADS Justin Trudeau, meet David Brooks. Read Brooks now, and then, if you become prime minister in the next election, re-read him before you bring forward your stupid idea about legalizing marijuana. Brooks offers the best, most eloquent explanation why marijuana should never be legalized. Writing in the New York Times recently, Brooks, who smoked pot as a teen himself, wisely refuses to play the game of duelling studies, in which one side of the debate produces research to back up its contentions, the other side rebuts with different research that supports its own stance, and everyone ends up at a stalemate, as polarized as when they started. Rather, he talks about marijuana in terms of the kind of society we want to have, something to which Trudeau ought to give some very sober second thought if he wants to be the prime minister of this country. Brooks wrote his column after marijuana became legal in Colorado on Jan. 1. Sales of recreational pot reached $5 million in the first week, incidentally lending a whole new meaning to Denver's famous claim to be the mile-high city. Brooks gave up pot as he moved through his teens, in part, because "I think we had a vague sense that smoking weed was not exactly something you were proud of yourself for. It's not something people admire. We were ... trying to become more integrated, coherent and responsible people. This process usually involves using the powers of reason, temperance and self-control - not qualities one associates with being high." No, none of that is associated with being high. People who are high waste their time, energy, resources and money sitting around stupidly in their drug induced fantasy world. Giddy and silly in their idiotic altered state, it is impossible for anyone who is sober to have any kind of reasoned communication with them. "I don't have any problem with somebody who gets high from time to time, but I guess, on the whole, I think being stoned is not a particularly uplifting form of pleasure and should be discouraged more than encouraged," Brooks writes. Alcohol is legal, and that's fine. Its responsible use in moderation harms no one and its effects wear off quickly. But marijuana should not be legal. Unlike alcohol, marijuana stays in the body for about a month after use, continuing to affect the workings of the user's brain. Do we really want a country in which people are going to their jobs each day still subtly under the influence from a recent high, even though outwardly they appear sober? Open-heart surgery on Tuesday by a doctor who got legally high last Saturday night, anyone? No? Didn't think so. Levels of THC, the main ingredient in pot, are not down to zero in that doctor's brain and risk affecting his judgment. Marijuana's legalization will only add to the ills that already come with the abuse of alcohol, including addiction and driving under the influence. Addictions lead to marriage breakups and the dissolution of families. And as Brooks succinctly puts it: "Smoking (pot) and driving is a good way to get yourself killed." Or get someone else killed, for that matter. Do we not have enough tragedies already caused by drunk drivers? And we need to add to the amount of substance abuse in society because - why? Brooks says the legalization of pot in Colorado and in Washington state before that means prices will drop and "simple economics ... confirmed by much research" suggests that "usage is bound to increase." And when usage increases, so do all the ills it brings. Do we really need that in Canada, Mr. Wanna-Be Prime Minister? The government of a healthy society, Brooks says, wants to "subtly tip the scale to favour temperate, prudent, self-governing citizenship." Thus, he says that things like the arts and enjoyment of nature need to be encouraged by government, and things like getting high need to be discouraged. Being a pothead is something nobody should aspire to or be proud of, and as a society, we should disdain marijuana use, not celebrate it. Trudeau needs to reflect long and hard on what kind of society a Liberal-led government wants Canada to be. Pot, order and good government isn't quite on the mark, is it? - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom