Pubdate: Sun, 26 Dec 1999 Date: 12/26/1999 Source: Calgary Herald (CN AB) Author: Harry Bego Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/66 Re "Rasta MP wants dope," Calgary Herald Dec. 15. You report on a newly elected New Zealand MP who said he will carry on smoking marijuana after taking office and demands the drug be made legal. It is sad to see prevailing anti-drug ideology makes you blindly regurgitate the propaganda that makes up the bulk of the information about the drug issue the media brings us these days. You write "the Green Party supports Tanczos's stance on marijuana and its plans have horrified churchman and community leaders, who point to a new study showing that more than one in five drivers who died had been smoking marijuana in the hours before they crashed." Such figures are so high a child can see they cannot be real. In reality, traces of marijuana remain detectable in the blood for four weeks after consumption, which is the cause for relatively high numbers of drivers testing positive. Given that effects of marijuana cease a few hours after intake, in just a small proportion of the instances the effects may have been present at the time of the accident. Your uncritical repetition of second-hand comments on low-quality research typifies the role the media play in the drug issue. Harry Bego Utrcht, Holland Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v99/n1361/a10.html