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Pro-Marijuana Group Mounts New Offensive Against US Drug Policy
CNSNews | 1/03/02 | Jim Burns

Posted on 01/03/2003 4:09:03 PM PST by Sparta

(CNSNews.com) - A group supporting the legalization of marijuana is planning a new Internet offensive against the Bush administration after an administration official alleged that marijuana-related hospital emergency room visits are way up.

Scott Burns, deputy director for state and local affairs for the White House Office of National Drug Control, said in a letter to the National District Attorneys' Association that "marijuana is not harmless but has risen as a factor in emergency room visits 176 percent since 1964, surpassing heroin."

He said district attorneys, county prosecutors and other law enforcement officials must better educate the public about the drug's danger.

"Smoking marijuana," Burns wrote, "leads to changes in the brain similar to those caused by the use of cocaine and heroin, and affects alertness, concentration, perception, coordination and reaction time."

He cited an unidentified study of a roadside check of reckless drivers not impaired by alcohol that he said found "45 percent tested positive for marijuana."

Burns also said marijuana is addictive and leads to the use of harder drugs.

Burns was unavailable for further comment on the story Thursday, according to a spokesman for his office.

Keith Stroup, executive director of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws (NORML), called the administration's stand an "incredibly disgusting example of government propaganda" and announced that his group is initiating a new offensive next week against the administration's anti-drug policy.

"This war against marijuana smokers has become a jihad. It's a holy war for these [Bush administration] fools. Truth is a first victim of war," said Stroup in an interview with CNSNews.com .

"Every single point they make in this letter is either a flat-out lie or grossly misrepresents science. Our intent is by early next week to post both their letter [written by Scott Burns] and our refutation point by point on our website," Stroup said.

The Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration said, in a study of 458 hospital emergency rooms nationwide, that drug-related emergency room visits rose six percent in 2001 over the previous year, to a new total of 638,484.

The number of times marijuana was mentioned as a drug used by patients rose 15 percent, greater than the increase in cocaine use, which rose 10 percent, according to the administration.

Dan Alsobrooks, in a letter on the National District Attorneys' Association website, called on prosecutors around the country to heed Burns' words and speak out more "forcefully" against legalizing marijuana and all drugs.

"Unless we speak out more forcefully," Alsobrooks wrote, "our communities continue to face an increasing onslaught of violence and death directly attributable to use of dangerous and poisonous drugs.

"Those who want to legalize drugs advance their position, issue by issue, winning by incremental victories. We can and have stopped their efforts at the national level but will lose all if the states yield individually," he said.

Stroup said the administration must move its drug policy into the 21st Century.

"These guys are simply resurrecting 'reefer madness' from the 1930s, and the cause of their approach is based on lies and misinformation," Stroup said. "They are bound to fail because they never seem to learn."

"Reefer Madness" was a 1930s cult movie about marijuana and its evil effect on people.

Stroup contends the administration's claims that hospital visits have risen because of marijuana use are based on what he called "hospital mentions."

He explained that a hospital "mention" is how hospitals report a patient's emergency room visit. At that time, patients are asked what drugs they have taken.

As an example, Stroup said, "Whenever someone comes in because they broke their wrist in a softball game, among the questions they [hospital officials] ask them is 'have they used any illicit drugs.'"

"So, naturally, when you have over 80 million Americans who have smoked marijuana at some time in their lives, and if people are willing to be honest, it's not infrequent that they mention they occasionally smoke marijuana," he said.

"That [marijuana use] doesn't have a G** D***** thing to do with their purpose for being in the emergency room, but those are still listed and counted as mentions," Stroup said.

The federal Drug Abuse Warning Network, according to its website, counts the mentions of illegal drugs and misused prescription drugs reported by patients and compiles them in semi-annual studies. Often, according to the network, patients have said they had taken more than one drug.

Alcohol, according to the network, in combination with other drugs was the most frequently mentioned nationwide, at 34 percent. Cocaine had 30 percent mentions, marijuana 17 percent and heroin 15 percent.

Burns contends that "nationwide, no drug matches the threat posed by marijuana. It is a much bigger problem than most people, including some in law enforcement, realize."

Stroup scoffed at that statement. "There were something like 450,000 deaths from tobacco smoking, and there were over 100,000 deaths from alcohol drinking, and there has never been a death caused by marijuana," he insisted.

The South Carolina Department of Alcohol and Other Drug Abuse Services agreed that, "no one has ever died from a marijuana overdose."

"However, when taken at very high doses, marijuana can produce severe psychotic symptoms that can require medical treatment," the department stated in a report on marijuana on its website.

States that allow marijuana to be used for medical purposes are: Arizona, California, Nevada, Oregon, Washington State, Alaska, Hawaii, Maine and the District of Columbia.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Extended News; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: fedjobprotection; wodlist
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An update to the disgusting piece of Fed propaganda/prosecutor job protection I posted yesterday.
1 posted on 01/03/2003 4:09:03 PM PST by Sparta
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To: Sparta
More War on Some Non-Commercially Exploitable Drugs bull$h!t.
2 posted on 01/03/2003 4:12:33 PM PST by RonF
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To: Sparta
Prosecutors urged to fight pot legalization(job protection)
3 posted on 01/03/2003 4:13:18 PM PST by Sparta
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To: Sparta
m
4 posted on 01/03/2003 4:14:12 PM PST by Nick Thimmesch
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To: Wolfie; vin-one; WindMinstrel; headsonpikes; philman_36; Beach_Babe; jenny65; AUgrad; Xenalyte; ...
WOD Ping
5 posted on 01/03/2003 4:16:25 PM PST by jmc813
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To: Sparta
I hope the Feds make it emphatically clear that marijuana use will never be legalized in the US. I hear Canada will start legalizing mj so maybe the pot heads can move north, way north.
6 posted on 01/03/2003 4:18:36 PM PST by caisson71
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To: Sparta
"There were something like 450,000 deaths from tobacco smoking, and there were over 100,000 deaths from alcohol drinking, and there has never been a death caused by marijuana,"

So, someone remind me, what is the objective reason why the first two are legal, and the third is not?

7 posted on 01/03/2003 4:20:32 PM PST by Steel Wolf
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To: caisson71
Ever heard of the Tenth Amendment? It means that drugs should be a state issue.
8 posted on 01/03/2003 4:20:46 PM PST by Sparta
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To: Sparta
"That [marijuana use] doesn't have a G** D***** thing to do with their purpose for being in the emergency room, but those are still listed and counted as mentions," Stroup said.

OK, here's what frustrates me to no end. I probably agree with this guy about 100%, and yet he cannot make his point without cursing. How does he possibly expect people to take him and his cause seriously while getting his point across like this. Same thing goes for some of the more "eccentric" spokespersons for the Libertarian Party.
9 posted on 01/03/2003 4:21:48 PM PST by jmc813
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To: Steel Wolf; caisson71
Ask caisson 71, he'll tell you.
10 posted on 01/03/2003 4:22:00 PM PST by Sparta
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To: Sparta
Now I see the light, the Drug Czar is right, Marijuana is bad,
It will make white women rape black Jazz muscians.
or something like that, Go WOD Go,
11 posted on 01/03/2003 4:23:45 PM PST by vin-one
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To: Sparta
The states cannot live without Federal money = it's also a Federal issue.
12 posted on 01/03/2003 4:24:43 PM PST by caisson71
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To: jmc813
Idiots like this spokesman is why the Libertarian Party will never get more than 1% of the vote nationally. I like the Libertarian philosophy, but it's the idiots expousing them and the fact the party draws such a small percentage of the vote is why I'm a registered Republican.
13 posted on 01/03/2003 4:25:05 PM PST by Sparta
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To: caisson71
I hope the Feds make it emphatically clear that marijuana use will never be legalized in the US.

It't not the government's job to tell US what the laws are going to be. People who want beauracrats to tell them how it is now and aways will be should move east, Far East (China, North Korea, etc).

The WOD is a despotic sham masquerading as public health issue. If there was a shred of consistancy and logic to this, then alcohol and tobacco would be illegal as well.

14 posted on 01/03/2003 4:25:06 PM PST by Steel Wolf
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To: caisson71
Try cutting the size of government and returning to our strict Constitutional roots, then it won't be a Federal issue.
15 posted on 01/03/2003 4:26:24 PM PST by Sparta
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To: Sparta
Smoking marijuana," Burns wrote, "leads to changes in the brain similar to those caused by the use of cocaine and heroin, and affects alertness, concentration, perception, coordination and reaction time."

It is MY LIFE, herr fuhrer, and NO ONE else's. If we are to define the life as I exist as MINE, it means there are NO CONDITIONS attatched to it. I DO NOT belong to the state, or to my fellow man. I have NO OBLIGATIONS to any one, except myself. This is the same I expect of others. I make no claim on the life of others, and I recognize NO claim to my life BY others.

do you sanctimonious statists understand?

16 posted on 01/03/2003 4:30:05 PM PST by galt-jw
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To: vin-one
Now I see the light, the Drug Czar is right, Marijuana is bad, It will make white women rape black Jazz muscians. or something like that, Go WOD Go,

Tis a thing of the devil, BURN, witch, burn.

17 posted on 01/03/2003 4:31:51 PM PST by galt-jw
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To: caisson71
I hope the Feds make it emphatically clear that marijuana use will never be legalized in the US. I hear Canada will start legalizing mj so maybe the pot heads can move north, way north.

What is your vested interest in the war on Americans(WOD's).

18 posted on 01/03/2003 4:33:45 PM PST by thepitts
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To: Sparta
bttt
19 posted on 01/03/2003 4:35:50 PM PST by lodwick
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To: galt-jw
Yeah, okay, but people on some drugs get violent, beat the wives and kids, and crash their cars into innocents all the time.

Oh, wait, that one's legal.

Well, some other drugs cause people near them to be hurt by the smoke.

Maybe it does. Maybe we just made that up. But that one's legal, too. Next.

Terrorists get money from drug sales.

Well, not like terrorist terrorists. We mean people we used to call Communist insurgents until we realized that many of you would fall for a simple switcharoo. Its a good thing that drugs are illegal, too, or those 'terrorists' wouldn't have a dime.

Some drugs don't really do anything to you but make you seem kinda dumb after a while.

That one ... is illegal.

20 posted on 01/03/2003 4:41:46 PM PST by Steel Wolf
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