News (Media Awareness Project) - CN ON: PUB LTE: More Support For Marijuana |
Title: | CN ON: PUB LTE: More Support For Marijuana |
Published On: | 2002-09-13 |
Source: | Sentinel Review (CN ON) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-22 01:53:43 |
MORE SUPPORT FOR MARIJUANA
Thanks to Eric Schmiedl for his support of the Senate special committee on
Illegal drugs and legalized marijuana.
The committee says, "Scientific evidence overwhelmingly indicates that
cannabis is substantially less harmful than alcohol" and that the gateway
theory "has not been validated by empirical research and is considered
outdated." Potency is a red herring since studies show users simply smoke
less of the more potent strains. These points are confirmed by the 1999
report ordered by the U.S. White House from the Institute of Medicine
[IOM]. The IOM report and related issues are briefly summarized in my free
booklet, "Are Texans being denied access to a vital medicine?" at www.dpft.org.
Illegal marijuana is easier for teens to get in the U.S than regulated
alcohol. I strongly doubt Canada is any different. Use is so widespread
that it's obvious that anyone who wants it, gets it.
This is now the ninth major government study of marijuana since 1969 and
they have all concluded that marijuana should at least be "decriminalized."
The committee made a powerful case for regulation instead of the waste and
hypocrisy inherent in decriminalization.
Why taxpayers should pay for futile attempts to stop sales for the benefit
of illegal dealers is beyond me, especially when tax revenues could benefit
taxpayers instead.
Please, Canada, don't let the U.S. bully you out of your common sense.
Jerry Epstein
President, Drug Policy Forum of Texas
Houston,Texas
Thanks to Eric Schmiedl for his support of the Senate special committee on
Illegal drugs and legalized marijuana.
The committee says, "Scientific evidence overwhelmingly indicates that
cannabis is substantially less harmful than alcohol" and that the gateway
theory "has not been validated by empirical research and is considered
outdated." Potency is a red herring since studies show users simply smoke
less of the more potent strains. These points are confirmed by the 1999
report ordered by the U.S. White House from the Institute of Medicine
[IOM]. The IOM report and related issues are briefly summarized in my free
booklet, "Are Texans being denied access to a vital medicine?" at www.dpft.org.
Illegal marijuana is easier for teens to get in the U.S than regulated
alcohol. I strongly doubt Canada is any different. Use is so widespread
that it's obvious that anyone who wants it, gets it.
This is now the ninth major government study of marijuana since 1969 and
they have all concluded that marijuana should at least be "decriminalized."
The committee made a powerful case for regulation instead of the waste and
hypocrisy inherent in decriminalization.
Why taxpayers should pay for futile attempts to stop sales for the benefit
of illegal dealers is beyond me, especially when tax revenues could benefit
taxpayers instead.
Please, Canada, don't let the U.S. bully you out of your common sense.
Jerry Epstein
President, Drug Policy Forum of Texas
Houston,Texas
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