Pubdate: Tue, 14 Jan 2014 Source: Boston Herald (MA) Copyright: 2014 The Boston Herald, Inc Contact: http://news.bostonherald.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/53 Note: Prints only very short LTEs. Author: Margery Eagan LIKE IT OR NOT, RECREATIONAL POT WILL BLOW INTO BAY STATE I'm thrilled that Charlie Baker, Juliette Kayyem, Don Berwick and yes, Steve Grossman, were once little stoners. Clearly the evil weed hasn't shut down their big brains, diminished their ambition or quashed their quest for big bucks. How fun to imagine a long-haired Stevie Grossman toking up in his tie-dye shirt, ear pressed against an old, huge stereo speaker blasting "Purple Haze." I can almost hear Little Stevie belting out, "'scuse me while I kiss the sky!!!" I'd say Grossman's hazy days have earned him some votes. But what's wrong with Martha Coakley and Joe Avellone? The Age of Aquarius came knocking. Jupiter was aligned with Mars, and they just, what? Picked up the books? Hit the library? Lectured classmates about "Reefer Madness?" Was there never an ounce of curiosity in their law-and-order bones? Neither gubernatorial hopeful has any standing to debate marijuana legalization here, which is coming, by the way. They don't know what they're talking about. I do, however, since half the kids I grew up with - including me - got high. And it was fantastic. Most of us stopped. A few, ahem, did not. But with my perfect attendance at Durfee High School reunions, I'm here to report that marijuana use was not what separated the success stories from the disasters. When I think of what's most destructive about marijuana actually, I think of the small-time users who lost scholarships or got fired because of drug hysteria. I think of kids who got arrested, sucked into the criminal justice system and never quite rebounded. I do not think of somebody giggling hysterically and shoving down a dozen Dunkin' Donuts. An American tragedy that is not. And while we're talking kids, enough with the "what about the children?" arguments against legalizing weed. Go ask some teenagers how easy it is to score pot - in school, at 9 o'clock in the morning outside the language lab. They'll tell you it's easier to get than liquor, which nobody's selling in school. You have to make a real effort to buy booze if you're a kid. You need a fake ID. A big brother or sister you can convince to buy it for you. Or you can steal it from your parents and hope they don't notice. Here's the deal. The war on marijuana is over. Unlike gay marriage, which started here and headed west, legalized pot started out west and is heading here. And when it arrives, Charlie, Juliette, Don and Little Stevie can have Joe and Martha over for a great big bong, mac n' cheese, pancakes and huge fat vats of Cherry Garcia. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom