Pubdate: Fri, 15 Apr 2016 Source: Boston Herald (MA) Copyright: 2016 The Boston Herald, Inc Contact: http://www.bostonherald.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/53 Note: Prints only very short LTEs. Authors: Jack Encarnacao and Matt Stout WALSH TANGLES WITH ADVOCATES OF POT LEGALIZATION Advocates for legalizing pot invoked "Reefer Madness" to mock opposition by top elected leaders - prompting Mayor Martin J. Walsh to fire back there is nothing funny about a detox ward. Walsh, Gov. Charlie Baker and House Speaker Robert A. DeLeo joined forces yesterday in a public appeal yesterday against legalizing marijuana, warning, "We've learned from the recent experience of other states - legal marijuana leads to higher rates of addiction, lower academic success, and significant health consequences for our kids." Bill Downing of Massachusetts Cannabis Reform Coalition countered, "Unfortunately, our governor and the mayor of Boston suffer from a mental disorder, it's called 'Reefer Madness.' " He was referring to the much-lampooned 1930s film that depicts dire consequences for marijuana use. "There's a lot of people that suffer from it, and it makes them think that marijuana's a very dangerous drug when actually it's not," Downing said. He said the three were paying too much attention to "people who have career interests in maintaining prohibition" - which he said includes cops and treatment centers. Walsh, pushing back at Downing's jibe, said, "I'll take him to a detox and we can talk to some people in detox and ask them about that. I haven't heard a real good reason for why we would legalize marijuana." Baker said he was alarmed by details in a state Senate report from a fact-finding trip to Colorado about the "ready availability of so many different forms of edibles and candy and brownies and cake and cookies." "I mean, the easy distribution issues this creates, especially for kids - my conclusion on this is, this is just the wrong thing for Massachusetts," Baker said. A statewide survey earlier this month by the Western New England University Polling Institute found 57 percent of voters favor legalization and 35 percent oppose it. Jim Borghesani, spokesman for the Campaign to Regulate Marijuana Like Alcohol, said, "The truth is that the greatest danger associated with marijuana is its illegal status. Our opponents seem to prefer that criminals control the marijuana market and sell untested, unlabeled products to people of any age." State Rep. David Rogers of Cambridge, who supports legalization, called key officials' opposition "a respectful difference of opinion among people of good faith." "It's important to remember, we're not going from zero use to full blown legalization," Rogers said. "We're going from a product that is widely in use illegally, and whatever public health and public safety effects we're going to feel, we're feeling them already." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom