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News (Media Awareness Project) - US FL: NORML Chief: Stop Punishing Pot Use
Title:US FL: NORML Chief: Stop Punishing Pot Use
Published On:2003-09-05
Source:Gainesville Sun, The (FL)
Fetched On:2008-01-19 15:11:48
NORML CHIEF: STOP PUNISHING POT USE

Keith Stroup admits he smokes pot.

That's a subject most people avoid, but Stroup, who founded and is
executive director of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana
Laws, is not shy about the issue.

He came to the University of Florida on Thursday night and spoke to about
1,000 people about why no one should be punished for enjoying a drug that
he said is safer than alcohol or cigarettes.

"It is important that we stop treating those of us who smoke marijuana like
criminals," he said.

The event was co-sponsored by Accent, UF's speaker's bureau.

The year-old NORML chapter at UF had the idea to bring Stroup to speak at
UF to bring attention to its fight for marijuana reform.

Matt Jones, promotions director and co-founder of NORML UF, said NORML UF
passed out 5,000 fliers promoting the event.

Stroup founded NORML in 1970 and has been lobbying on Capitol Hill for the
reformation of marijuana laws.

Matt King, a third-year UF student, was interested to hear Stroup.

"I want to hear what the pro-legalization dogma is in Washington," he said.
"It should be interesting."

Logan Steuben, a 19-year-old UF student, had his own ideas.

"I believe anything you do that doesn't cause harm to others, you should be
able to do," Steuben said.

That was also the basic premise for Stroup's speech.

Throughout the 45-minute talk, Stroup quoted figures and statistics to make
his point that responsible use of marijuana should not be punished.

He quoted a CNN/Time magazine poll from 2002 that found that 47 percent of
Americans admitted to having smoked marijuana at some point in their lives.

Also, he pointed out that marijuana is the third most popular recreational
drug in the country, just behind alcohol and cigarettes.

He said alcohol kills about 50,000 Americans each year, and
cigarette-related deaths average 430,000 a year. Not only has no one ever
overdosed on marijuana, he said, it is nearly impossible to do, he said.

"Perhaps there is no such thing as a harmless drug," Stroup said, "but
marijuana is the closest thing to it."

Stroup also talked about marijuana for medical use. He said marijuana
cannot only be used to alleviate medical symptoms such as pain from nerve
damage or nausea, but preliminary studies have shown that heavy doses of
THC (tetrahydrocannabinol), the chemical in marijuana that causes
mind-altering effects, may be able to regenerate brain tissue damaged in
severe accidents like car crashes.

"It seems inconceivable to me that anyone would want to deny effective
medication to seriously ill patients," Stroup said.

Stroup said 724,000 Americans were arrested on marijuana charges last year,
which he broke down into one smoker arrested every 46 seconds. In monetary
terms, he said that's $10 billion dollars spent on chasing, arresting and
prosecuting nonviolent marijuana smokers each year.

Stroup has been fighting for the decriminalization of pot for more than 30
years and remains optimistic about the future for those who "enjoy smoking
a marijuana cigarette to relax."

"We are gradually but steadily winning this fight," Stroup said as the
closing words of his speech were met with a standing ovation.
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