Pubdate: Thu, 31 Oct 2002 Source: Las Vegas Weekly (NV) Copyright: 2002 Radiant City Publications, LLC Contact: http://www.lasvegasweekly.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1036 Author: David Perkins Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?162 (Nevadans for Responsible Law Enforcement) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?163 (Question 9 (NV)) GOD AND MARIJUANA Citing Religion And History To Make A Case For Pot God made just about everything in nature, and most would agree that everything in nature was created for a very good reason. Did God make grass so people who smoke it would then go on to do harder drugs? Don't think so. Everything in creation was good by God's own opinion, and this we know by what God said after everything made was finished: "O and God said, it is good." It might be worth considering (before we vote on the issue) just how this product of nature recently has gotten such an evil reputation in our society. The use of marijuana has been well-documented throughout history, on scrolls in ancient China, clay tablets, Egyptian papyrus, and even was legal in most of these United States as late as the early 1900s. Not once in these six millennia worth of data - from 6,000 B.C. to 1920 - was marijuana ever (connected) to gang killings or a starting point for harder drug use. About the worst said about the effects of it was that it made people lazy, forgetful and silly behavior many of us exhibit anyway, naturally. Who decided marijuana become evil in the 1930s? The United States government did. When Americans came to their senses and repealed the 18th amendment banning alcohol, marijuana was then needed by our government to be a public enemy - and out of purely economic reasons, not for the effects the plant produces within the human system. Remember, to rid the great evil alcohol back then, thousands of law enforcement agents were hired during the 1920s for this great moral experiment. When the (stock market) crash came in 1929, these government workers certainly could not be laid off in the middle of the Great Depression when alcohol became legal again in 1933. Under similar circumstances, any government would probably have done the same. Unfortunately, the outrageous facts the government put out in order to justify making cannabis a crime are still within many citizens' psyches today, creating an unbalanced approach to handle this weed that God wished to grow naturally throughout the Earth. Marijuana is a social problem today simply because the word "criminal" is associated with it on the law books. Didn't we already learn with alcohol? Americans were drinking beer when our founding fathers penned the Constitution. How did beer suddenly make people who drank it evil, and how did nearly all the gangsters rise in political and financial power during Prohibition? Was it the beer? Was it the people? No, it was THE LAWS. David Perkins - --- MAP posted-by: Beth