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News (Media Awareness Project) - US ID: PUB LTE: Illegal Item Uses
Title:US ID: PUB LTE: Illegal Item Uses
Published On:2003-03-09
Source:Idaho State Journal (ID)
Fetched On:2008-01-20 22:37:42
ILLEGAL ITEM USES

I don't use drugs, and I think drug dealers are the lowest form of humanity.

However, Jason Ainsworth's letter in the Journal of March 4 reminded me of
something.

I bought a pipe tomahawk for a display. It was made in Pakistan. As we all
know, tomahawks were used as weapons. They were also intended to be used as
pipes. This pipe tomahawk had a hole through the handle and into the pipe
so that it could be smoked.

My intention at the time was merely to hang it on the wall. However, I
noticed that the bowl of the pipe had a fine screen in it. From my
understanding, the screen was there to facilitate the use of the pipe in
smoking marijuana.

Now, then, where would I stand in the eyes of the attorney general of the
United States?

I am in possession of an item that was originally designed for bashing in
heads. To cater to the Native American ceremonial use of tobacco, the
designers stuck on the pipe bowl.

So what is my intent in owning this item? Do I intend to use it to bash in
heads, to smoke tobacco in it, to smoke marijuana in it (illegally), or
just to hang it on the wall as part of a cultural display?

I just kinda wonder how someone can be arrested for owning or selling
something on the assumption that the "culprit" will use that item in an
illegal fashion. Guns? Knives? Bows and arrows? Blow guns? Those things can
really hurt people in the wrong hands. Yeah, even misdirected airplanes can
hurt people.

Where does one start to protect people from themselves and other people?
How many laws must we pass before we eliminate all the awful things that
can damage people?

Maybe we should all crawl into a hole and pull it in after us. Would that
satisfy the attorney general of the U.S.?

Jack Contor, Pocatello
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