News (Media Awareness Project) - US AZ: Edu: PUB LTE: Marijuana Policy Still Flawed |
Title: | US AZ: Edu: PUB LTE: Marijuana Policy Still Flawed |
Published On: | 2010-11-19 |
Source: | Arizona Daily Wildcat (AZ Edu) |
Fetched On: | 2010-11-28 03:02:15 |
MARIJUANA POLICY STILL FLAWED
In response to Storm Byrd's column "A new kind of green party": If
health outcomes determined drug laws instead of cultural norms,
marijuana would be legal. Unlike alcohol, marijuana has never been
shown to cause an overdose death, nor does it share the addictive
properties of tobacco. Marijuana can be harmful if abused, but jail
cells are as inappropriate as health interventions and ineffective as
deterrents.
The first marijuana laws were enacted in response to Mexican
immigration during the early 1900s, despite opposition from the
American Medical Association. Dire warnings that marijuana inspires
homicidal rages have been counterproductive at best. White Americans
did not even begin to smoke pot until a soon-to-be entrenched federal
bureaucracy began funding reefer madness propaganda.
Marijuana prohibition has failed miserably as a deterrent. The U.S.
has higher rates of marijuana use than the Netherlands, where
marijuana is legally available to adults. The only clear winners in
the war on marijuana are drug cartels and shameless tough-on-drugs
politicians who've built careers confusing the drug war's collateral
damage with a relatively harmless plant.
Robert Sharpe
Policy analyst, Common Sense for Drug Policy
Washington, D.C.
In response to Storm Byrd's column "A new kind of green party": If
health outcomes determined drug laws instead of cultural norms,
marijuana would be legal. Unlike alcohol, marijuana has never been
shown to cause an overdose death, nor does it share the addictive
properties of tobacco. Marijuana can be harmful if abused, but jail
cells are as inappropriate as health interventions and ineffective as
deterrents.
The first marijuana laws were enacted in response to Mexican
immigration during the early 1900s, despite opposition from the
American Medical Association. Dire warnings that marijuana inspires
homicidal rages have been counterproductive at best. White Americans
did not even begin to smoke pot until a soon-to-be entrenched federal
bureaucracy began funding reefer madness propaganda.
Marijuana prohibition has failed miserably as a deterrent. The U.S.
has higher rates of marijuana use than the Netherlands, where
marijuana is legally available to adults. The only clear winners in
the war on marijuana are drug cartels and shameless tough-on-drugs
politicians who've built careers confusing the drug war's collateral
damage with a relatively harmless plant.
Robert Sharpe
Policy analyst, Common Sense for Drug Policy
Washington, D.C.
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