Pubdate: Fri, 11 Aug 2000 Source: New Brunswick Telegraph Journal (CN NK) Copyright: 2000 New Brunswick Publishing Company Contact: http://www.nbnews.com/telegraphjournal/ Author: Robert Sharpe, http://www.mapinc.org/writers/rob+sharpe Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v00/n1135/a05.html Cited: http://www.ssdp.org/ REDUCE CRIME BY LEGALIZING MARIJUANA Letter-writer Mary Thurrott of the Christian Action Federation of New Brunswick claims that today's marijuana is 10 times stronger than the marijuana of the 1970s ("Smoking marijuana is not safe," Aug. 8.) If true, this is not necessarily a bad thing. Both weak and potent marijuana will yield the desired result when smoked. The only difference between the two is that strong marijuana requires significantly less smoke inhalation. If Ms. Thurrott is truly concerned about lung damage she should be happy that today's marijuana is stronger. It is important to note that unlike alcohol, no strain of marijuana - regardless of potency - has ever proven toxic enough to cause an overdose death. This is not to say that marijuana should be legal because it is relatively harmless. Like any drug, marijuana can be harmful if abused. I doubt that anyone in the drug policy reform movement will deny that. It is not the effects of marijuana that necessitate legalization, but rather the effects of drug laws. In North America, children have an easier time buying marijuana than beer. While a liquor store will refuse to sell alcohol to a minor to avoid losing its license, a drug dealer will sell to anyone. More disturbing is the manner in which marijuana users come into contact with pushers of harder drugs. The "gateway to hard drugs" status often ascribed to marijuana is a direct result of its illegal status, not any inherent quality of the plant itself. If I purchase a bottle of wine at a state-regulated liquor store, I am not offered free samples of crack cocaine. Yet marijuana smokers routinely come into contact with pushers of deadly hard drugs. The black market status of marijuana puts its distribution in the hands of organized crime. In effect, drug laws finance organized crime which, in turn, fuels violence and corruption. The North American experience with alcohol prohibition confirms that legalization will not only eliminate drug law-related violence, but also make it significantly harder for children to purchase drugs. Canada has before it a unique opportunity to make amends for decades of counterproductive drug policy. While Ms. Thurrott suggests that future generations will ask why marijuana was legalized should such a policy shift occur, a better question is, why was it ever made illegal in the first place? The history of marijuana laws is quite interesting. Virtually no North Americans smoked marijuana until our governments started telling us not to. Prior to the passage of the Marijuana Tax Act of 1937 and subsequent reefer madness propaganda, few U.S. citizens had ever heard of the drug. Marijuana use was limited to Mexican migrants and a handful of black musicians. It has been argued by historians that the original marijuana laws were a racist reaction to Mexican labourers taking jobs from whites during a time of economic depression. Marijuana prohibition was never based on science. If health outcomes determined drug laws, marijuana would be legal and alcohol and tobacco would not. Legislation was passed in large part due to American newspaper magnate William Randolph Hearst's sensationalist yellow journalism. Incredibly violent acts were allegedly committed by minorities under the influence of marijuana. The laws were a means of disenfranchising minorities. Exposing the racist roots of the drug war may help shed light on Canada's marijuana legalization debate. In many respects, the drug war has always been a culture war. The most ardent modern-day supporters of marijuana prohibition tend to confuse the marijuana leaf with the counterculture of the 1960s, despite the fact that the plant has been mainstream for years. In doing so, they ignore the tremendous societal harm caused by drug laws and the manner in which marijuana prohibition is actually counterproductive at protecting youth from drugs. Robert Sharpe, Students for Sensible Drug Policy George Washington University, Washington, D.C. - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk