Pubdate: Fri, 09 Jun 2000 Date: 06/09/2000 Source: Mountain Xpress (NC) Author: Alan Mason Related: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v00/n696/a05.html [Joseph] Howard's letter contains several errors in logic, the most serious of which is the implication that marijuana legalization would somehow benefit international drug cartels. It is the illegal status of marijuana and other drugs that benefit the cartels by making their sale so obscenely profitable, and legalization - accompanied by true government regulation, like we have for tobacco and alcohol - that would put the drug cartels out of business. As for his remark that people who oppose marijuana prohibition sound like they are "struggling through a stint in the old Soviet Gulag," perhaps he could explain how handing out sentences of 20-to-life for growing a plant for one's own personal or medical use fits our American system of fair and appropriate punishment. Many things we do in life are not good for us. Illegal marijuana is arguably less harmful than legal tobacco or alcohol - or many prescription drugs, for that matter. The founders of our country said that the pursuit of happiness was a right, but were wise enough not to prescribe how we might pursue that happiness. It's time we regained a little of that wisdom. Alan Mason, Aguanga, Calif. [Editor's note: A letter printed in our May 24 issue by Joseph Howard - "Skip the pot, get a life" - apparently created a firestorm of controversy across America, after being posted on Web sites such as the one run by the Media Awareness Project. Because of the number of responses, some of the letters below are appearing only online.]