Source: Daily Herald (IL) Page: 16, sec. 1 Contact: March 8, 1998 TOBACCO VS. MARIJUANA Daily Herald editorial writers articulated our national schizophrenia regarding drug policy recently as they rallied for universal condemnation of marijuana ("Marijuana use isn't harmless," Feb. 17) while days later they favored concessions and continued leniency for the tobacco industry ("Without immunity, tobacco deal fails," Feb. 19). These views may be popular, but when analyzed side by side they defy logic. Tobacco addicts millions and it leads hundreds of thousands to early death each year, including second-hand smokers who didn't even make the choice to use it. No one suggests tobacco has medical value. Marijuana, on the other hand, has been recommended by doctors to patients suffering from AIDS, the side effects of chemotherapy and a variety of spastic muscle disorders, among other maladies. It is not physically addicting and human deaths related to marijuana use have not been credibly documented. There is no argument about the need to keep children away from both substances, but the strategies are radically different. Somehow marijuana will be kept away from kids by exaggerating its risks and enforcing increasingly strict penalties for any use, even doctor-sanctioned medical use. But when it comes to tobacco, the industry should be trusted to keep kids away from their product, even though documents now show how representatives lied for decades about active marketing to children. Both strategies retreat from honesty and rationality as if they were the plague. They have failed and will continue to fail. To show how ludicrous these "solutions" are, think about reversing them. Imagine a world where marijuana manufacturers are allowed the power to negotiate regulation even as they receive subsidies from the federal government, while pot is available at virtually every gas station and grocery store. In that same world, imagine citizens who risk forfeiting their liberty and property for possessing the smallest amount of tobacco, while they are scolded by editorialists for not thinking negatively enough about the demon drug. Sound insane? Perhaps, but how much crazier is it than what we have now? Stephen Young Roselle