Pubdate: Thu, 19 Jun 2014 Source: Globe-Gazette (Mason City, IA) Copyright: 2014 Globe-Gazette Contact: http://www.globegazette.com/app/opinion/submit_letter_to_the_editor/ Website: http://www.globegazette.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1568 Author: Todd Blodgett Note: Todd Blodgett served on President Ronald Reagan's White House staff from 1985-87 and on the 1988 campaign staff of President George H. W. Bush. He also worked for the Republican National Committee and the FBI. Blodgett lives in Clear Lake and is a recovering drug addict. JUST SAY NO TO LEGALIZING MARIJUANA On July 1, an oil extract of marijuana will be legal in Iowa. But Iowans must reject proposals to legalize pot on a broader scale. Legally sanctioned weed would thwart economic growth, destabilize families, cause more crime, overburden police and courts, and victimize law-abiding citizens and taxpayers. Lawmakers often ignore unintended consequences when considering legislation, but does Iowa need more Iowans to be stoned? That's the question, as the new law has incited demands for decriminalizing cannabis. Teenagers in states with legal marijuana have higher drug abuse than in states where it's illegal. The New York Times reported on Nov. 7, 2012, that 90 percent plus of so-called "medical marijuana" is used by those who claim "pain" and not serious illness. Addictive drugs corrupt even more so than money or power. Pot is extremely insidious, harmful and it adversely affects users far worse than they realize. Even High Times magazine in October 2013 published arguments against medicinal marijuana. Studies show that smoking cannabis regularly can lower the IQ of teenagers by up to 8 points, and today's weed is more potent than ever. This stuff isn't your dad's or your grandpa's pot. It's far more lethal with significantly more serious and counterproductive side-effects. Marijuana is also a Gateway Drug which can and will lead users to even more dangerous, illicit (and often fatal) drug addictions. Alaska learned the hard way that legalizing even small amounts of weed was a huge mistake. When marijuana use among Alaska's teens jumped to twice the national average, voters there passed a ballot initiative to recriminalize it. History proves that no nation has ever withstood the legalization of mind-altering drugs; not a single country. The late Dr. James Q. Wilson of Harvard University opposed legalization, saying, "Drug use is immoral ... because it enslaves the mind and destroys the soul." Why would any society ever want unhealthful substances destroying the minds, bodies, souls, character and potential of its own citizens? Experience proves that whenever controlled substances are legalized, consumption rises. Do Iowans want the level of damage which will surely result from legal Mary Jane -- as junkies call pot -- to even approach the damage alcohol causes? Colorado legalized medical weed in 2009. Today, pot is available there in vending machines. Yes, Colorado's law prohibits use by minors. But this prohibition, as with booze and cigarettes, has proven ineffectual. Marijuana-infused brownies, "Pot-Tarts," cookies, candy, sodas and even pasta sauces now line the shelves of Colorado's stores. The state's highways, particularly around Denver, are littered with billboards advertising cannabis, many of which feature cartoon characters to target young people. Pot producers and drug dealers know what Big Alcohol and Big Tobacco know: hook users early and they're yours for life. Get them to use heavily, get them addicted -- and big profits flow. The American Medical Association issued a report in 2013 opposing legalization. Among its irrefutable, damning conclusions was that "heavy cannabis use in adolescence causes persistent impairments in neurological performance and in IQ, and is associated with increased rates of anxiety, mood and psychotic thought disorders." Consequences of pot usage aren't restricted to those who smoke it. Since 2004, fatal auto accidents involving stoned drivers have tripled, according to a recent report in The American Journal of Epidemiology. With Iowans debating health care, high taxes and spending, and how to fix our schools and universities, why push now for more dumbed-down, lazy, counterproductive citizens? Ask your legislative candidates if we need dumber Iowans and if they want more potheads. If they say they'd even consider voting to legalize marijuana for broader usage, then ask them what they're smoking. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom