News (Media Awareness Project) - US OR: PUB LTE: 'Pothead' An Unnecessary Slur |
Title: | US OR: PUB LTE: 'Pothead' An Unnecessary Slur |
Published On: | 2005-07-27 |
Source: | Register-Guard, The (OR) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-15 23:08:50 |
'POTHEAD' AN UNNECESSARY SLUR
After reading the July 18 article by reporter Tim Christie, "New marijuana
group shuns potheads," I have to respond to Tom and Terry Thornhill's
bigoted perspective concerning medical cannabis and "potheads."
In 1998, when Oregon voters overwhelmingly beat back the recriminalization
of cannabis and passed an initiative allowing for the legal use of medical
cannabis by this state's patients, it was because of those potheads. In a
little over a month, more than 100,000 signatures were gathered at the last
minute to get an initiative on the ballot opposing recriminalization in
time for that November's election. A lot of those signatures were gathered
by potheads.
The stereotyping portrayed by the Thornhills is exactly why cannabis -
whether medicinal, recreational, spiritual or industrial - remains under
federal prohibition. The un-American, oppressive and perjured origins of
our laws criminalizing cannabis were initiated by a bigoted federal
bureaucrat, Harry Anslinger, the nation's first drug czar. The subsequent
70 years of anti-cannabis propaganda has made the slur "pothead" acceptable.
Pothead is no less polite in a society based on mutual respect and
acceptance than any racially oriented derogatory term. Its use is
indicative of how successful hatred and bigotry can be when mandated by
government policy. I say shame on the Thornhills.
ALLAN ERICKSON
Eugene
After reading the July 18 article by reporter Tim Christie, "New marijuana
group shuns potheads," I have to respond to Tom and Terry Thornhill's
bigoted perspective concerning medical cannabis and "potheads."
In 1998, when Oregon voters overwhelmingly beat back the recriminalization
of cannabis and passed an initiative allowing for the legal use of medical
cannabis by this state's patients, it was because of those potheads. In a
little over a month, more than 100,000 signatures were gathered at the last
minute to get an initiative on the ballot opposing recriminalization in
time for that November's election. A lot of those signatures were gathered
by potheads.
The stereotyping portrayed by the Thornhills is exactly why cannabis -
whether medicinal, recreational, spiritual or industrial - remains under
federal prohibition. The un-American, oppressive and perjured origins of
our laws criminalizing cannabis were initiated by a bigoted federal
bureaucrat, Harry Anslinger, the nation's first drug czar. The subsequent
70 years of anti-cannabis propaganda has made the slur "pothead" acceptable.
Pothead is no less polite in a society based on mutual respect and
acceptance than any racially oriented derogatory term. Its use is
indicative of how successful hatred and bigotry can be when mandated by
government policy. I say shame on the Thornhills.
ALLAN ERICKSON
Eugene
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