HTTP/1.0 200 OK Content-Type: text/html Reefer Mainstream, Part 1 of 4
Pubdate: Thu, 31 Oct 2002
Source: Phoenix New Times (AZ)
Copyright: 2002 New Times, Inc.
Contact:  http://www.phoenixnewtimes.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/640
Author: Amy Silverman
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis)

REEFER MAINSTREAM, Part 1 of 4

Thousands Of Arizonans Smoke Marijuana. Get Over It.

Most days, Harriet comes home from work, takes off her bra and gets high.

"I'm going outside," she calls across the house, padding toward the garage 
in a tee shirt and jeans. The dog follows. Harriet stops to move wet 
clothes from the washing machine to the dryer, then heads to a work table 
laid out with an ashtray, a lighter, a small pink bong and a Ziploc baggie 
filled halfway with pot. She packs the bong once and takes several deep 
stoner hits, filling the hot October afternoon air with sweet smoke.

There's no phone out here. No computer. No clock that works. Harriet stands 
at her work table and considers rearranging the living room furniture. 
Sometimes she writes fiction. No one bugs her out here. Her girlfriend 
can't stand the smoke. Even the dog's not wild about it. He leaves as soon 
as she picks up the lighter.

Harriet doesn't keep her pot locked up, and she often smokes with the 
garage door open -- the cars in the driveway block the view from her 
central Phoenix street.

But few people know that Harriet smokes pot. And very few, if any, would 
ever guess.

Harriet is 43. For the past 16 years, she has run her own successful small 
business. She pays her taxes. She usually votes. She's in a long-term 
relationship. College-educated. She rarely even speeds on the freeway.

"I haven't had a ticket in a million years. I'm a very law-abiding person," 
she says.

Except when it comes to marijuana.

Harriet may be a lonely stoner, but she's not alone. Pot smokers are among 
us: your kid's schoolteacher, your lawyer, the chef at your favorite local 
restaurant. This particular brand of pot smoker likely doesn't drink much 
and gave up cigarettes long ago. They don't subscribe to High Times. They 
feel out of place in head shops. Some are Republicans. They're not very 
good at rolling joints, but they do know how to make a bong out of a toilet 
paper roll, if necessary.

They don't want their kids to get high, at least not till they're 18. 
They'll lie to the kid about what's in that baggie in the underwear drawer. 
These secret pot smokers don't get busted -- most will tell you they get 
their pot from "friends," not "dealers" -- and if they do get addicted to 
the stuff, no one seems to know.

But they do get pot, and they do get high. Some nearly every day, like Harriet.

Harriet first encountered pot in college and liked it right away. Way 
better than drinking. But she eventually stopped, mainly because no one 
else she knew was smoking. A couple years ago, an old friend came to town 
and showed up at a party with some pot. Harriet loved it -- again. She 
started smoking -- again.

This time it's a solitary pursuit.

"Very few people that I know -- that I know -- smoke," she says. That makes 
it hard to find marijuana. At first her long-distance friend mailed it. She 
packed it in coffee, to mask the smell. But that got scary. Then Harriet 
found a local supply.

"Every time I get it, I'm thinking, Okay, I'll take my phone with me, so 
that if I get arrested, I can call somebody.' And it's a little 
nerve-wracking, every time. I have to get a little more, I have to buy it 
in larger quantities, so I don't have to go as often."

She pays $80 an ounce, and an ounce lasts her a couple of months. "It's 
really cheap, bad pot. But it works for me," she says.

Unfortunately, cheap pot gives Harriet the munchies.

Harriet budgets her money, so if times (or her waistband) are a little 
tight, she smokes a little less. She never drives stoned. She never, ever 
smokes on the job.

Does she ever wonder if her clients smoke? "Sometimes I do. And there was 
one client where I was almost going to say something," she says.

But she didn't. She never does.

"I'm not secretive about being a lesbian. I'm not secretive about anything 
else in my life. It's weird. It's not because somebody's going to beat me 
up. It's because I'm going to get fucking arrested."

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It's virtually impossible to quantify the number of people who smoke pot today.

In recent weeks, New Times has talked with dozens of people who use 
marijuana: from computer programmers and MBAs to parents of toddlers and 
parents of teenagers. One woman was taking a break from smoking pot while 
she tries to pass a urinalysis to get a marketing job at a high-tech firm. 
Another sells pharmaceuticals and drinks a tea called "Urine Luck" that 
masks the marijuana in her system when her company drug tests. Artists, 
journalists, teachers, housewives, musicians, a former prosecutor.

With few exceptions, these people appear to live normal, productive, safe 
lives.

Pot is no big deal to them. Except when it comes to talking openly about 
it. Then they get a little paranoid.

For years, researchers have tried to quantify the number of marijuana users 
in America. Each year, the federal government sponsors the National 
Household Survey on Drug Abuse. People are asked about tobacco, alcohol and 
illicit drug use. Marijuana is broken into a separate category. In 2001, 
the survey estimated that 94 million Americans had tried marijuana in their 
lifetimes, 21 million in the past year.

Paul Armentano, publications and research director for NORML, the National 
Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws based in Washington D.C., 
believes this number is a vast understatement because people lie.

"The survey is based on . . . people's willingness to tell the federal 
government that they engage in illicit activity," he says.

Armentano points to government research that demonstrates that, when asked 
about tobacco and alcohol use, people will underreport their use by 15 to 
30 percent. And those substances are legal.

"In many ways, we really have no idea what these surveys are telling us," 
he says.

The most recent National Household Survey detailing the results by state 
took place in 1999. At that time, about 5 percent of Arizonans said they 
had used marijuana in the past month, on par with the national average.
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