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Make Peace With Pot
NY Times ^ | April 26, 2004 | ERIC SCHLOSSER

Posted on 04/26/2004 2:22:46 PM PDT by neverdem

Starting in the fall, pharmacies in British Columbia will sell marijuana for medicinal purposes, without a prescription, under a pilot project devised by Canada's national health service. The plan follows a 2002 report by a Canadian Senate committee that found there were "clear, though not definitive" benefits for using marijuana in the treatment of chronic pain, multiple sclerosis, epilepsy and other ailments. Both Prime Minister Paul Martin and Stephen Harper, leader of the opposition conservatives, support the decriminalization of marijuana.

Oddly, the strongest criticism of the Canadian proposal has come from patients already using medical marijuana who think the government, which charges about $110 an ounce, supplies lousy pot. "It is of incredibly poor quality," said one patient. Another said, "It tastes like lumber." A spokesman for Health Canada promised the agency would try to offer a better grade of product.

Needless to say, this is a far cry from the situation in the United States, where marijuana remains a Schedule I controlled substance, a drug that the government says has a high potential for abuse, no accepted medical uses and no safe level of use.

Under federal law it is illegal to possess any amount of marijuana anywhere in the United States. Penalties for a first marijuana offense range from probation to life without parole. Although 11 states have decriminalized marijuana, most still have tough laws against the drug. In Louisiana, selling one ounce can lead to a 20-year prison sentence. In Washington State, supplying any amount of marijuana brings a recommended prison sentence of five years.

About 700,000 people were arrested in the United States for violating marijuana laws in 2002 (the most recent year for which statistics are available) — more than were arrested for heroin or cocaine. Almost 90 percent of these marijuana arrests were for simple possession, a crime that in most cases is a misdemeanor. But even a misdemeanor conviction can easily lead to time in jail, the suspension of a driver's license, the loss of a job. And in many states possession of an ounce is a felony. Those convicted of a marijuana felony, even if they are disabled, can be prohibited from receiving federal welfare payments or food stamps. Convicted murderers and rapists, however, are still eligible for those benefits.

The Bush administration has escalated the war on marijuana, raiding clinics that offer medical marijuana and staging a nationwide roundup of manufacturers of drug paraphernalia. In November 2002 the Office of National Drug Control Policy circulated an "open letter to America's prosecutors" spelling out the administration's views. "Marijuana is addictive," the letter asserted. "Marijuana and violence are linked . . . no drug matches the threat posed by marijuana."

This tough new stand has generated little protest in Congress. Even though the war on marijuana was begun by President Ronald Reagan in 1982, it has always received strong bipartisan support. Some of the toughest drug war legislation has been backed by liberals, and the number of annual marijuana arrests more than doubled during the Clinton years. In fact, some of the strongest opposition to the arrest and imprisonment of marijuana users has come from conservatives like William F. Buckley, the economist Milton Friedman and Gary Johnson, the former Republican governor of New Mexico.

This year the White House's national antidrug media campaign will spend $170 million, working closely with the nonprofit Partnership for a Drug-Free America. The idea of a "drug-free America" may seem appealing. But it's hard to believe that anyone seriously hopes to achieve that goal in a nation where millions of children are routinely given Ritalin, antidepressants are prescribed to cure shyness, and the pharmaceutical industry aggressively promotes pills to help middle-aged men have sex.

Clearly, some recreational drugs are thought to be O.K. Thus it isn't surprising that the Partnership for a Drug-Free America originally received much of its financing from cigarette, alcohol and pharmaceutical companies like Hoffmann-La Roche, Philip Morris, R. J. Reynolds and Anheuser-Busch.

More than 16,000 Americans die every year after taking nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs like aspirin and ibuprofen. No one in Congress, however, has called for an all-out war on Advil. Perhaps the most dangerous drug widely consumed in the United States is the one that I use three or four times a week: alcohol. It is literally poisonous; you can die after drinking too much. It is directly linked to about one-quarter of the suicides in the United States, almost half the violent crime and two-thirds of domestic abuse. And the level of alcohol use among the young far exceeds the use of marijuana. According to the Justice Department, American children aged 11 to 13 are four times more likely to drink alcohol than to smoke pot.

None of this should play down the seriousness of marijuana use. It is a powerful, mind-altering drug. It should not be smoked by young people, schizophrenics, pregnant women and people with heart conditions. But it is remarkably nontoxic. In more than 5,000 years of recorded use, there is no verified case of anybody dying of an overdose. Indeed, no fatal dose has ever been established.

Over the past two decades billions of dollars have been spent fighting the war on marijuana, millions of Americans have been arrested and tens of thousands have been imprisoned. Has it been worth it? According to the government's National Household Survey on Drug Abuse, in 1982 about 54 percent of Americans between the ages of 18 and 25 had smoked marijuana. In 2002 the proportion was . . . about 54 percent.

We seem to pay no attention to what other governments are doing. Spain, Italy, Portugal, the Netherlands and Belgium have decriminalized marijuana. This year Britain reduced the penalty for having small amounts. Legislation is pending in Canada to decriminalize possession of about half an ounce (the Bush administration is applying strong pressure on the Canadian government to block that bill). In Ohio, possession of up to three ounces has been decriminalized for years — and yet liberal marijuana laws have not transformed Ohio into a hippy-dippy paradise; conservative Republican governors have been running the state since 1991.

Here's an idea: people who smoke too much marijuana should be treated the same way as people who drink too much alcohol. They need help, not the threat of arrest, imprisonment and unemployment.

More important, denying a relatively safe, potentially useful medicine to patients is irrational and cruel. In 1972 a commission appointed by President Richard Nixon concluded that marijuana should be decriminalized in the United States. The commission's aim was not to encourage the use of marijuana, but to "demythologize it." Although Nixon rejected the commission's findings, they remain no less valid today: "For the vast majority of recreational users," the 2002 Canadian Senate committee found, "cannabis use presents no harmful consequences for physical, psychological or social well-being in either the short or long term."

The current war on marijuana is a monumental waste of money and a source of pointless misery. America's drug warriors, much like its marijuana smokers, seem under the spell of a powerful intoxicant. They are not thinking clearly.

Eric Schlosser is the author of "Fast Food Nation" and "Reefer Madness."


TOPICS: Heated Discussion
KEYWORDS: peterpufferpaulsen
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To: William Terrell
BTW, your use of dashes to represent days of no posts is distracting. It looks like a you are trying to use a separation technique to aid the viewer. Maybe you could improve this. Just plain dots would do better.

Nevermind. That would require you to have the source code and be able to program.

1,301 posted on 05/01/2004 10:20:04 PM PDT by cinFLA
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To: William Terrell; Bozo
Legalizing crack is not on the conservative agenda.
1,277 posted on 05/01/2004 8:51:39 PM PDT by cinFLA | To 1274


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Disrupting FR daily about the unconstitutional criminalization of drugs is not on anyones conservative agenda either.
Even a clown should know that.
1,286 tpaine

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I know he pisses you off. He pisses me off.
But we got to maintain some decorum. This stuff is what he wants.
He's the kid in the school yard that pushes and prods guys into a fight ("Hey, you gonna let him say that to you. . .?, ect) so he can watch the fun.
Bah.
CC: cinfla
1,291 -WT-


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I disagree. Bozo wants respect.

-- He wants to [in his eyes] 'out-argue' everyone, regardless of tactics. -- If you try to be semi courteous, you play his game, -- & you lose.

The ONLY thing that really enrages him is disdain.
Clowns expect laughs, but they cannot abide our pity & contempt. Try it, and he will go away, -- or better yet, he will lo0se it & get himself banned again.

He's done this before. -- 'Cin', 'cynical', etc, is an old hand at this divisive BS.
1,302 posted on 05/01/2004 10:20:33 PM PDT by tpaine (In their arrogance, a few infinitely shrewd imbeciles attempt to lay down the 'law' for all of us.)
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To: Ken H
Authorities believe such programs reach about 70­80 percent of the country's 25,000 hard­drug users

I am not sure I would trust a source with errors like this!

1,303 posted on 05/01/2004 10:25:05 PM PDT by cinFLA
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To: tpaine
get himself banned again.

I have never been banned.

1,304 posted on 05/01/2004 10:26:04 PM PDT by cinFLA
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To: Bozo
Bozo has never been banned either.

'Cynical', in his various personas has been banned at least three times, imo.
1,305 posted on 05/01/2004 10:29:21 PM PDT by tpaine (In their arrogance, a few infinitely shrewd imbeciles attempt to lay down the 'law' for all of us.)
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To: cinFLA
Having read the sections of the US State Department report that I quoted in post #1271, which country do you think had a worse heroin problem in 1996, Singapore or the Netherlands?

Why do you live in the past when so much has happened since?

Just doing a little sacred cow tipping on a Saturday night.

1,306 posted on 05/01/2004 10:29:30 PM PDT by Ken H
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To: cinFLA
I want the skipped days to be obvious, yet the visual graphic nature of the pattern still readable at a glance.

1,307 posted on 05/01/2004 10:30:30 PM PDT by William Terrell (Individuals can exist without government but government can't exist without individuals.)
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To: tpaine
'Cynical', in his various personas has been banned at least three times, imo.

Impossible.

1,308 posted on 05/01/2004 10:45:29 PM PDT by cinFLA
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To: William Terrell
I want the skipped days to be obvious, yet the visual graphic nature of the pattern still readable at a glance.

But it looks like you are trying to put in a separator, like the start of each week or something.

On one line you use dots to indicate no post and in another you use dashes. Poor human factors engineering.

1,309 posted on 05/01/2004 10:47:21 PM PDT by cinFLA
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To: William Terrell
It's 12:48 AM. Are you having fun yet?
1,310 posted on 05/01/2004 10:49:18 PM PDT by cinFLA
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To: William Terrell
What the professionals say about your output.

http://www.webstyleguide.com/page/dimensions.html

Most display screens used in academia and business are seventeen to nineteen inches (forty-three to forty-eight centimeters) in size, and most are set to display an 800 x 600-pixel screen. Web page graphics that exceed the width dimension of the most common display screens look amateurish and will inconvenience many readers by forcing them to scroll both horizontally and vertically to see the full page layout. It's bad enough to have to scroll in one (vertical) direction; having to scroll in two directions is intolerable.

1,311 posted on 05/01/2004 10:52:40 PM PDT by cinFLA
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To: cinFLA
The dots indicate no posts in a 15 minute period. The dashes mean no posts at all on that day.

1,312 posted on 05/01/2004 10:57:25 PM PDT by William Terrell (Individuals can exist without government but government can't exist without individuals.)
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To: cinFLA
That's why it's posted with the font size=1.

1,313 posted on 05/01/2004 10:59:26 PM PDT by William Terrell (Individuals can exist without government but government can't exist without individuals.)
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To: William Terrell
That's why it's posted with the font size=1.

You should then put in the instructions for downloading the proper font inorder to view your output. But of course, you as a professional programmer knew this all along, right?

1,314 posted on 05/01/2004 11:01:44 PM PDT by cinFLA
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To: cinFLA
But of course, you as a professional programmer knew this all along, right?

Yes.

1,315 posted on 05/01/2004 11:10:43 PM PDT by William Terrell (Individuals can exist without government but government can't exist without individuals.)
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To: Bozo
Only clowns say it's impossible.
1,316 posted on 05/01/2004 11:36:28 PM PDT by tpaine (In their arrogance, a few infinitely shrewd imbeciles attempt to lay down the 'law' for all of us.)
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To: William Terrell
I want the skipped days to be obvious, yet the visual graphic nature of the pattern still readable at a glance.

I don't you're think supposed to be talking about the data patterns, you're supposed to be arguing over minutia and defending your programming abilities.

1,317 posted on 05/02/2004 7:33:16 AM PDT by tacticalogic (Controlled application of force is the sincerest form of communication.)
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To: tacticalogic
You're probably right. I'm under performing. . .

1,318 posted on 05/02/2004 7:59:22 AM PDT by William Terrell (Individuals can exist without government but government can't exist without individuals.)
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To: tacticalogic; Bozo
you're supposed to be arguing over minutia and defending your programming abilities.

1,317 posted on 05/02/2004 7:33:16 AM PDT by tacticalogic


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Well put.. Engaging a cynical bozo on his level of minutia is impossible.

Trivia is his life.

1,319 posted on 05/02/2004 8:07:19 AM PDT by tpaine (In their arrogance, a few infinitely shrewd imbeciles attempt to lay down the 'law' for all of us.)
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To: William Terrell
I must have missed that in the instructions. I wonder how many others also missed it.
1,320 posted on 05/02/2004 9:52:27 AM PDT by cinFLA
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