Pubdate: Fri, 14 Feb 2014 Source: Kalamazoo Gazette (MI) Copyright: 2014 Sheree Gravely Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/vggfBDch Website: http://www.mlive.com/kzgazette/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/588 Author: Sheree Gravely JULIE MACK'S COLUMN ON SMOKING POT IGNORES REAL DANGERS I find it sad that Julie Mack so often refuses to take full consideration of issues. Her recent statement that "from a health standpoint marijuana may be less dangerous than alcohol" shows a clear misunderstanding of the risk for chronic pot smokers that legalization will most likely bring. Let's be clear that marijuana usage (outside of true medical usage) is at least as dangerous, if not more, than alcohol. The reasons are clear: 1. The primary reason to smoke pot is to get high. Therefore, anyone smoking it is attempting to achieve a high, which impairs his or her judgment. There are many occasions when alcohol is consumed with no intention to get intoxicated 2. Pot and its chemical ingredient THC stays in the system for days and months for smokers. This means that those who start out just getting high occasionally, become constantly high after regular pot usage. The drug is found in their body up to 90 days after quitting. 3. Pot is clearly a gateway drug. If you speak to clinicians in the rehab of drugs like heroin and cocaine, almost all will say that their clients started with pot. 4. Today's pot is five times more potent that the pot that was smoked in the 1970's. 5. People who become chronic pot smokers don't have the same achievements as people who don't use it chronically. Mack's general dismissal of problems surrounding the legalization of pot is concerning. Just as we have strengthened restrictions on alcohol and other intoxicants, we should avoid any suggestion that relaxing restrictions on this intoxicant is a good thing. Sheree Gravely, Portage - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D