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News (Media Awareness Project) - US NV: OPED: Drug Legalizers Plan Another Visit to Nevada
Title:US NV: OPED: Drug Legalizers Plan Another Visit to Nevada
Published On:2010-06-13
Source:Nevada Appeal (Carson City, NV)
Fetched On:2010-06-14 03:00:18
DRUG LEGALIZERS PLAN ANOTHER VISIT TO NEVADA

Even though Nevada voters have rejected them twice in recent years by
60-40 margins, the drug legalizers will return to the Silver State in
2012. I hope we send them home for good next time around.

The Washington, D.C.-based Marijuana Policy Project (MPP) announced
last December that it is again seeking signatures for a Nevada ballot
measure to legalize the "recreational, non-medicinal use" of
marijuana. As most Nevada voters realize, however, that would only be
the first step down the slippery slope of drug legalization. The MPP
will need to collect more than 100,000 signatures by Nov. 9 in order
to put their misguided measure on our 2012 ballot.

Meanwhile, a similar measure will be on the California ballot in
November. The initiative would permit anyone 21 or older to possess
up to one ounce of marijuana (several joints) and to cultivate plants
in an area not to exceed 25 square feet. Having been an overseas foot
soldier in the war on drugs for many years, I think that's a bad
idea, and I readily confess that I'm not objective on the subject of
drug legalization.

California has been in the forefront of the marijuana legalization
movement since 1996, when voters approved a measure that legalized
so-called "medical marijuana." Nevada followed suit four years later
but due to stricter rules and regulations, we haven't suffered the
serious law enforcement problems that have occurred in California as
a result of the proliferation of virtually unregulated pot "clinics."

While I was in Southern California for medical treatments early this
year, the liberal Los Angeles City Council finally cracked down on
pot dispensaries, closing hundreds of them in an effort to keep them
away from schools and children. Of course, customers complained that
the city was limiting access to their prescribed medication.

But does marijuana smoke qualify as "medicine"? If a doctor
determines that a patient really needs THC, the active ingredient in
marijuana, he or she can prescribe Marinol, which delivers a more
potent, measured dose of the drug -- a more efficient and
cost-effective delivery system for THC.

I'm not saying that all medical marijuana patients simply want to
smoke pot, but I suspect that's a primary motivation for many of
them. I share the concerns of my fellow drug legalization opponents:
increased drug consumption, more automobile and industrial accidents,
and reduced academic achievement in our schools. And that's not all.

A 2007 study by researchers at Cardiff University in Wales determined
that marijuana smokers "had roughly a 40 percent higher chance of
developing psychotic disorders later in life." Cigarettes are bad
enough, but marijuana is much worse. Nuff said!
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