Pubdate: Fri, 19 Aug 2005 Source: Salem News (MA) Copyright: 2005 Essex County Newspapers Contact: http://www.salemnews.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3466 Author: Steven S. Epstein RAIDS ON POT GROWERS A WASTE OF TAXPAYERS' MONEY To the editor: It's late summer and the marijuana plants are ripening and the Marijuana Eradication Team is busy flying seek and destroy missions over the state. Your tax dollars at work, subsidizing the growers who do not get caught with the remarkably high price of $240 to $320 dollars an ounce for flowers! To justify the cost of helicopters roaming our skies at low altitude and ground eradication squads roaming our open fields, the spokesman for the District Attorney's office recites the usual unfounded claims about marijuana being a "gateway drug," "is more potent" and therefore dangerous - so dangerous just look at all the children in treatment. As for the "gateway" argument, while it is true that "marijuana use precedes hard drug use as RAND researchers reported in a 2002 article, "Reassessing the Marijuana Gateway Effect," that the reason is "simply because opportunities to use marijuana come earlier in life than opportunities to use hard drugs." As for the potency, there have always been very potent strains of marijuana, yet even if on average today's commodity is more potent, it is like saying whiskey is more potent than beer, it is meaningless to the policy debate. Finally as to the numbers of persons in treatment for marijuana, it is because they are ordered into treatment by the Courts. According to the federal Drug and Alcohol Services Information System, 58 percent of all marijuana admissions are through the criminal justice system. Legalizing, taxing and regulating this agricultural commodity used in the past month by about 10 percent of Essex County's adult population, while prohibiting it to children as we do tobacco and alcohol, is the only policy consistent with securing the Constitution's promised Blessings of Liberty. Steven S. Epstein Georgetown (Editor's note: Steven Epstein, an attorney, is the founder of the Massachusetts Cannabis Reform Coalition and has long been active in the effort to loosen the laws regarding marijuana use.) - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom