Pubdate: Thu, 15 Aug 2002 Source: Reno Gazette-Journal (NV) Copyright: 2002 Reno Gazette-Journal Contact: http://www.rgj.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/363 Author: Cory Farley Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/walters.htm (Walters, John) A TIP FOR VOTERS: GET THE FACTS Among the mysteries of modern life is the knee-jerk, jump-up-and-shout reaction a lot of people have to marijuana. I've seen with my own eyes an officer of the court, cigarette in mouth and martini in hand, ranting about how people who smoke dope should be locked up. When I mentioned his own habits, he sneered. "I'm talking about drugs," he said. I mean, the guy has graduate degrees. For the record, I don't use marijuana. I have used it (inhaled, too), but not since the Nixon administration. No personal interest here. In November, Nevada voters will see a ballot initiative that would decriminalize possession of small amounts of pot. Early polls show it will fail, which is OK with me. OK, too, though, if it passes, because it would show people trying to force-feed us manure that we're not pure fools. One is John Walters, head of the federal Office of Drug Control Policy (motto: "We are, too, accomplishing something"). In Las Vegas recently, Walters said that Nevada is a "pawn in a nationally funded campaign" aimed at legalizing marijuana. The rhetoric! The rhetoric! When you call someone a pawn, you imply that he's being used, he's too dumb to see it (could he be slightly backward?) and it's your duty to protect him. Walters trotted out all the icons - "criminal organizations" that are a "dangerous threat" to our "democratic institutions" - and called decriminalization "a great con." If he gave evidence, it wasn't reported. On the same side is Washoe County District Attorney Dick Gammick, who has said marijuana advocates are "dishonest" and part of a "national coalition (supporting) the legalization of all illegal drugs." Oh, poo. I'm a lukewarm advocate, and the only national coalition I belong to is the Sierra Club. Decriminalization's backers say we're throwing $10 billion a year at weed, yet it's still America's No. 3 drug of choice, behind alcohol and tobacco. About 30 percent of us have used it. In social terms, the cost of marijuana is invisible next to those of tobacco and alcohol. And the proposed law wouldn't legalize it, only decriminalize it. Personal use would not be a crime. Selling in quantity would, as would supplying to minors or driving while zonked. The law is similar to one proposed by Richard Nixon's Commission on Marijuana and Drug Abuse 30 years ago, and by several bodies since. You can read summaries, and get a look at the other side of this issue, at www.norml.org, the Web site of the National Organization for Reform of Marijuana Laws. It's not unbiased, but it's no more biased than the stuff you're seeing now. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom