Pubdate: Fri, 03 Mar 2000 Source: Amherst Bulletin Contact: (c) 2000 Amherst Bulletin Author: Ellsworth Barnard, Amherst MARIJUANA LAWS DON'T MAKE SENSE Howard Ziff's comments on marijuana (Bulletin commentary, Feb. 11) call for elaboration. The present laws, federal and state, which criminalize the sale, possession, or use of marijuana are, quite simply, indefensible -- the offspring of willful ignorance and impenetrable prejudice. The evidence offered in their support is purely ancedotal and sometimes obviously fictional. I know of no scientific, peer-approved study that justifies the present system. Though the smoke, like that of tobacco, is damaging to the lungs, it is not, like nicotine, addicitve. And, unlike "hard" drugs, the need for it, or for the money to buy it, does not lead to crime. Furthermore, unlike alcohol, it does not lead to violent or uncontrolled behavior. I have never heard that it encourages rape; I have never heard of a car crash that was attributed to the use of marijuana by the driver. Finally, the charge that it becomes a "gateway" to the use of "hard" drugs is, like the other charges, scientifically unsubstantiated. On the other hand, attempts to enforce the laws against it are undeniably destructive. The cost in dollars runs into the billions; the human cost is incalculable. They corrupt the persons who enforce them (as was graphically demonstrated in a TV "Frontline" program a few months ago), and they fill the jails with persons (mostly young, and often black) who have been guilty of nothing that reason would call a crime. A final baneful effect of society's obsessive fear of marijuana is the denial to terminally ill persons of the relief from suffering that it would offer. What rational motive can there be for such a prohibition? This is not merely unjustified, it is cruel and contemptible, a forced and senseless sacrifice to a fanatical and false belief. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart