Pubdate: Mon, 22 Apr 2002 Source: Diamondback, The (MD Edu) Copyright: 2002 Maryland Media, Inc. Contact: http://www.diamondbackonline.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/758 Note: is also listed as email contact Author: Nancy Leu Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v02/n758/a07.html SUH TAKES POT SHOTS BY MAKING VALUE JUDGMENTS In response to Elizabeth Suh's column, ("This bud's for you, not me," April 19) that intended to avoid the debate about why marijuana users are bad, Suh does just that: make value judgments about those who smoke pot. If her argument is that meaningful connections can only be made while sober, than she is de-legitimizing the experiences of a healthy fraction of our university (and global) population. Perhaps it is hurtful for someone who is drug-free to believe people who use marijuana do have experiences just as valuable and real as those who choose to abstain. The most pressing issue in her column was not that her friend was a pothead, but that he neglected her feelings even when confronted about his exorbitant pot use. Why engage in a relationship in which one's feelings are ignored. I do not appreciate Suh's "othering" of marijuana users. A good/bad binary is not the answer when the issue is so much more complex. People who smoke pot can be anyone from politicians superiors at work, our friends, lovers or relatives. Not all individuals who smoke are losers who sleep all day and can't "make anything of [their] lives." Suh would probably be shocked to know there are plenty of productive members of society who light up blunts or take bong hits. I do believe there are alternatives to getting high, especially when someone expresses issues that should be dealt with professionally. If someone you know is having a hard time tapering their drug habits even when they negatively affect other people and make it difficult to function on a daily basis, a good friend would probably help that person seek counseling, not further a conditional relationship in which the pot user is outcasted when stoned and welcomed when sober. I simply don't see how that constitutes "caring" about someone. Nancy Leu Senior, Women's studies - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens