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News (Media Awareness Project) - CN NF: PUB LTE: Cannabis Less Addictive Than Coffee
Title:CN NF: PUB LTE: Cannabis Less Addictive Than Coffee
Published On:2009-03-16
Source:Charter, The (CN NF)
Fetched On:2009-03-19 12:07:31
CANNABIS LESS ADDICTIVE THAN COFFEE

Dear Editor:

There is not a single location in North America where Sgt. William
Dwyer"s method of keeping youth off drugs (Drug Information Session
Held, Mar. 3, 2009) is working. It works as intended to create jobs
for police, the prison industry and their unions but fails otherwise.
Want to keep citizens off honest deadly hard drugs? Then re-legalize
the relatively safe, socially acceptable, God-given plant cannabis as
suggested by the 1970's Le Dain Commission's report along with
Canada's 2002, Senate Committee on Illegal Drugs' report which
unanimously recommended to regulate cannabis the same way as alcohol.

One beneficial component of re-legalizing cannabis (marijuana) that
doesn't get mentioned is that it will lower hard drug addiction
rates. DARE (Drug Abuse Resistance Education) will have to stop
brainwashing youth into believing lies, half-truths and propaganda
concerning cannabis, which creates grave future problems.

How many citizens try cannabis and realize it's not nearly as harmful
as taught in DARE-type government environments? Then they think other
substances must not be so bad either, only to become addicted to
deadly drugs. The old lessons make cannabis out to be among the worst
substances in the world, even though it's less addictive than coffee
and has never killed a single person.

The federal government even classifies cannabis as a Schedule I
substance along with heroin, while methamphetamine and cocaine are
only Schedule II substances. For the health and welfare of America's
children and adults that dangerous and irresponsible message
absolutely must change.

Further, regulated cannabis sales would make it so citizens who
purchase cannabis would not come into contact with people who often
also sell hard drugs, which would lower hard drug addiction rates.

Stan White

Dillon, Colorado
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