Pubdate: Mon, 16 Feb 2015 Source: Columbus Dispatch (OH) Copyright: 2015 The Columbus Dispatch Contact: http://www.dispatch.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/93 Author: Michele DeShazo PROBLEMS WITH POT GO FAR BEYOND DOLLARS I respond to the Feb. 9 letter "Legal pot coming but make it fair," from Martyn Brodnik. The writer asserted that "legal marijuana is coming, whether all Ohio residents like it or not. Fortunes will be made." The problem he identified with legalizing marijuana is the fairness of who is going to be making these fortunes. I strongly disagree with Brodnik's assessment, and find the problem to be much more devastating. In the Feb. 7 Dispatch article "Addiction programs in budget," I read that "eight of 10 people come to Ohio prisons with a history of abusing drugs and alcohol." On that same page, I read the Dispatch article "Two men convicted of heroin trafficking." Turn the page, and I read an article on a drug raid in which police gunfire aimed at dogs hit a fleeing suspect instead. Another article on the same page told of a roadrage collision in which one of the drivers is charged with operating a vehicle under the influence of drugs or alcohol and posession of marijuana and paraphernalia. The next page of the same Metro & State section had an article about a man sentenced to 10 months in prison for helping to dump a woman's body after she died of a heroin overdose. Readers turned to page B8 and found an article about police finding almost 20 pounds of pot, along with guns, digital scales and packing materials, in a home. A child was removed from the home, which was within 1,000 feet of a middle school. These are just some of the obvious problems with legalizing marijuana. Studies that show the effect of marijuana on a human brain are another reason not to legalize. The problem with legalizing marijuana is not as simple as who will be getting rich. The real problem is the devastating impact drugs have (yes, marijuana is a gateway drug) and how to control and ultimately stop the drug problem that already spills into our communities and lives, daily. For those who agree with President Barack Obama and think marijuana is just a bad habit or that legal penalties fall disproportionately on minorities and that states legalizing pot should go ahead with their plans, I ask, are those really good reasons to jeopardize the quality of our lives and our children's lives and futures? The sole purpose of using marijuana is to get high. Are we really saying we all think that is an acceptable condition in which to function in our society? MICHELE DeSHAZO Westerville - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom