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News (Media Awareness Project) - Ireland: PUB LTE: Cannabis Party Was Right: It Is Not A Gateway To Addiction
Title:Ireland: PUB LTE: Cannabis Party Was Right: It Is Not A Gateway To Addiction
Published On:1997-06-10
Source:Cork Examiner, County Cork, Ireland
Fetched On:2008-09-08 15:26:14
Cannabis Party was right: it is not a gateway to addiction

In your editorial (The Examiner, May 28th), you state 'the reality that
cannabis is a stepping stone to addiction and harder drugs. That is
accepted wherever the drugs menace is prevalent and remains a central
reason for not legalising its use.'

I would like to point out that all the research done has refuted this
piece of propoganda. I would refer you to:

1. The La Guardia report which states: "The use of marijuana does not lead to
morphine or heroin or cocaine addiction."

2. The Jamaican Study carried out on behalf of The Center for Studies of
Narcotics and Drug Abuse of the National Institute of Mental Health. Directed
by Drs. Vera Rubin and Lambros Comitas of the Research Institute for the Study
of Man and conducted in Jamaica. Summarizing the findings of the study in the
July 4, 1975 issue of Science Magazine, Dr. Erich Goode of the State university
of New York at Stony Brook wrote:

"One of the more interesting findings to emerge from this study relates to
the 'stepping-stone' hypothesis. ... Nothing like that occurs among heavy,
chronic ganja smokers of Jamaica. No other drugs were used, aside from
aspirin, tea, alcohol, and tobacco. The only hard drug use known on the
island is indulged by North American tourists."

3. The study conducted by the Institute of Medicine of the National Academy of
Sciences (NAS) and released in 1982, the 15-month study analyzed the
habits of American marijuana smokers and offered one of the most
comprehensive and balanced analyses ever compiled regarding marijuana
and its effects. In regards to marijuana's gateway potential, the study
concluded that, "There is no evidence to support the belief that the use of
one drug will inevitably lead to the use of any other drug."

4. In the USA, federal statistics indicate that although nearly 66 million
Americans over age 12 have experimented with marijuana at some point in their
lifetime, less than one-third of them have ever tried cocaine. Moreover,
less than 16 million Americans admit to having ever experimented with LSD, less
than 7 million have ever tried methamphetamines, and only 2.5 million have ever
graduated to heroin. In sum, federal statistics conclude that the
overwhelming majority of American marijuana users do not move on to harder
drugs.

5. Also from the USA, the 1995 guidebook: Marijuana: Facts for
Teens, published by
the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), states
unequivocally that,
"Most marijuana users do not go on to use other drugs."

Need I continue to provide you with more evidence or do you accept
that you have been misinformed?

Researchers and reporters are always welcome at the worlds largest on-line
library of drug policy information at http://www.druglibrary.org/

Hugh Robertson
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