News (Media Awareness Project) - Canada: PUB LTE: Pot Perspectives |
Title: | Canada: PUB LTE: Pot Perspectives |
Published On: | 2000-08-07 |
Source: | Globe and Mail (Canada) |
Fetched On: | 2008-09-03 13:26:50 |
POT PERSPECTIVES
Houston -- There is precious little that the United States can teach anyone
about drug policy; no democracy has a worse one. However, U.S. research is
useful for all and Canada seems more likely to profit from it than we
ourselves are.
I'm guessing that some of the Canadian resistance to legalizing marijuana,
as suggested by William Johnson, will be based on fear of a "gateway" to
the use of other drugs. The New York Times (March 18, 1999) called an
Institute of Medicine report commissioned by the White House Office of
National Drug Control Policy "the most comprehensive analysis to date of
the medical literature about marijuana." The report itself said the gateway
is "a social theory [which] does not suggest that the pharmacological
qualities of marijuana make it a risk factor for progression to other drug
use. Instead it is the [illegal] status of marijuana that makes it a
gateway drug."
In short, we have created exactly what we claim to fear. No rational policy
will emerge if the mythology of political rhetoric is allowed to drown out
science. Our joint governmental stance is costly, immoral and inhumane.
O, Canada, please show us the way.
Jerry Epstein, President, Drug Policy Forum of Texas
Houston -- There is precious little that the United States can teach anyone
about drug policy; no democracy has a worse one. However, U.S. research is
useful for all and Canada seems more likely to profit from it than we
ourselves are.
I'm guessing that some of the Canadian resistance to legalizing marijuana,
as suggested by William Johnson, will be based on fear of a "gateway" to
the use of other drugs. The New York Times (March 18, 1999) called an
Institute of Medicine report commissioned by the White House Office of
National Drug Control Policy "the most comprehensive analysis to date of
the medical literature about marijuana." The report itself said the gateway
is "a social theory [which] does not suggest that the pharmacological
qualities of marijuana make it a risk factor for progression to other drug
use. Instead it is the [illegal] status of marijuana that makes it a
gateway drug."
In short, we have created exactly what we claim to fear. No rational policy
will emerge if the mythology of political rhetoric is allowed to drown out
science. Our joint governmental stance is costly, immoral and inhumane.
O, Canada, please show us the way.
Jerry Epstein, President, Drug Policy Forum of Texas
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