Townhall
The
War on Pot: Not a Safe Bet
by Steve Chapman
Jan 20, 2013
As
recreational drugs go, marijuana
is relatively benign. Unlike alcohol, it doesn't stimulate violence or
destroy
livers. Unlike tobacco, it doesn't cause lung cancer and heart disease.
The
worst you can say is that it produces intense, unreasoning panic. Not
in users,
but in critics.
Those
critics have less influence
all the time. Some 18 states permit medical use of marijuana, and in
November,
Colorado and Washington voted to allow recreational use. Nationally,
support
for legalization is steadily rising. A decade ago, one of every three
Americans
favored the idea. Today, nearly half do -- and among those under 50, a
large
majority does.
These
trends have diehard drug
warriors screaming bloody murder. Former Rep. Patrick Kennedy, D-R.I.,
has
formed a new organization to stop what he imagines to be the
"300-miles-per-hour freight train to legalization." He says that such
a change would be especially harmful to teenagers.
White
House drug czar Gil
Kerlikowske insists that even allowing medicinal pot "sends a terrible
message" to adolescents. Mitchell Rosenthal, a psychiatrist who founded
the substance-abuse treatment group Phoenix House, says there is
"mounting
evidence of the dangers it poses, especially to young users."
They
might have a point if existing
drug laws were keeping weed out of the hands of wayward kids. In truth,
they're
about as effective as a picket fence in a tidal wave. In a 2009 survey,
high school
students said they found it easier to get than beer. In 2011, 23
percent of
12th-graders said they had used weed in the preceding month.
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