Pubdate: Sat, 10 Mar 2007 Source: San Francisco Chronicle (CA) Copyright: 2007 Hearst Communications Inc. Contact: http://www.sfgate.com/chronicle/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/388 Author: Bruce Mirken Note: Title by MAP Editor Cited: Kaiser Permanente Center for Health Research (http:// www.kpchr.org/public/default.asp) Cited: Marijuana Policy Project (http://www.mpp.org/) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?247 (Crime Policy United States News) DISAGREE WITH WINN ABOUT REGULATION OF PERSONAL BEHAVIOR Editor -- I always read Steven Winn's columns with some interest, and find myself agreeing more often than not, but I was taken aback by something he wrote: "But when the country turned against Prohibition, a distaste for regulating all forms of personal behavior became part of our national constitution." With all due respect, Americans may like to imagine this is so, but it's not. If we really had a national distaste for regulating personal behavior, we would not have more people locked up in state and federal prisons for drug offenses than the entire prison populations (for all offenses of any sort) of England, Scotland, Germany, Spain, Italy, the Czech Republic and the Netherlands combined. And we would not arrest more people for marijuana possession -- not sales, cultivation or trafficking, just possession -- than for all violent crimes combined. And we would not spend tens of billions of dollars a year on a "war on drugs" that has had no discernible effect other than to enrich criminal gangs, fill our prisons and keep hundreds of thousands of police, prison guards, attorneys and drug- war bureaucrats employed. Indeed, despite overwhelming evidence that marijuana relieves nausea, vomiting, certain types of pain and other symptoms, federal law and the laws of 39 states bar even people with life-threatening illnesses from using marijuana with their doctor's recommendation to relieve a bit of their misery. Bear in mind that in every measurable way, marijuana is orders of magnitude less dangerous than either tobacco or alcohol. The reasons for its prohibition could be argued to be cultural or political or bureaucratic or historical -- or maybe simply a desire to regulate "undesirable" behavior -- but they are not scientific or medical. One final note: Since your column was about tobacco, the issue of marijuana obviously brings up some of the same concerns about smoking. While smoking marijuana presents some of the same risks as tobacco (e.g. cough, bronchitis), marijuana has never been shown to increase one's risk of lung cancer or other tobacco-related cancers. In a study out of Kaiser Permanente in Oakland that followed 65,000 people for 10 years, cigarette smokers had about an 11-fold increased risk of lung cancer compared to nonsmokers. But marijuana smokers who didn't smoke tobacco had no increased risk. Bruce Mirken Director of Communications Marijuana Policy Project Washington, D.C. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman