Pubdate: Fri, 22 Nov 2002
Source: Rocky Mountain Collegian, The (CO Edu)
Copyright: 2002 Rocky Mountain Collegian
Contact:  http://www.collegian.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1370
Author: Laura Standley
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/campaign.htm (ONDCP Media Campaign)

MARIJUANA CONTINUES TO BE A HAZY TOPIC

Whether or not marijuana should be legalized is a question lingering since 
the drug's prohibition in 1937 under the Marijuana Tax Act. The White House 
Office of National Drug Control Policy recently launched a national 
advertising campaign offering their answer to the legalization question as 
an emphatic "no."

The National Youth Anti-Drug Media Campaign is targeting youths from now 
through June 2003. Also, the campaign targeting parents is running until 
December, according to the Office of National Drug Control.

The anti-drug campaign provides facts about the risks of marijuana use and 
consequences in effort to stop youth marijuana use. For parents, the 
campaign will advocate measures in order for them to raise anti-drug youths.

Marijuana is the most used illegal drug in America and 37 percent of 
Americans over the age of 12 have used marijuana in their lifetime, 
according to the National Drug Control Policy Overview.

The younger a child is when they first use marijuana correlates with 
children growing up to try cocaine and heroin and be drug addicted adults, 
according to the NDCPO.

However, it is also argued drug use is not the same as drug abuse and drugs 
can be used responsibly, according to the EC 101 Web site of CSU Economics 
Professor Steven Shulman.

Advocates for the legalization of marijuana emphasize the feeling that 
marijuana convictions are unjust.

"Drugs are a handicap. I don't think anyone should use them. But if a 
person is using marijuana in his or her own home, doing no harm to anyone 
other than arguably to himself or herself, should that person be arrested 
and put in jail? In my opinion, the answer is no," said New Mexico Gov. 
Gary Johnson in a statement on July 10, 2001.

Under the Clinton administration, a marijuana smoker was arrested every 45 
seconds, according to the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana 
Laws report titled "Sixty Years of Marijuana Prohibition in the U.S."

According to Shulman's Web site, about half out of approximately 1.5 
million arrests made each year are for marijuana possession or 
distribution. After an arrest for one of these crimes, the person could be 
sentenced using mandatory drug sentencing laws. Mandatory sentences do not 
allow for a judge to take into account a defendant's personal circumstances.

Though Shulman's Web site says there have been no reported marijuana 
related deaths, research indicates that marijuana causes respiratory 
problems, impaired memory, anxiety and panic attacks and increased heart 
rate, according to the NDCPO.

"The zero death rate for marijuana users may be caused by the fact that 
"people go on and off marijuana, but cigarettes may be more addictive," 
said Pam McCracken, the director of The Center for Drug and Alcohol 
Education for Hartshorn Health Center. "It's a type of drug that varies 
from person to person."

Marijuana may be more damaging to lungs than cigarettes because it is 
usually smoked unfiltered with the leaves unpacked and inhaled more deeply 
with smoke held in the lungs for a longer time, McCracken said. Also, 
marijuana bypasses the liver and is not filtered in the body.

A myth the ONDCP said is common is that marijuana is harmless.

"One joint is equivalent to maybe 20 cigarettes," McCracken said. 
"Benzopyrene is a cancer causing agent (found in marijuana)."

Marijuana is dangerous for drivers because its effects can last longer. 
Some people may test positive for driving under the influence of marijuana 
24 hours after the driver smoked marijuana, McCracken said. However, it is 
certain that one ounce of alcohol is cleansed from the body in one hour, 
she said.

She added there are continued medical effects after a student stops smoking 
marijuana.

"We do know that when students want to [quit smoking marijuana] they have 
anxiety, sleeplessness... that do get better over time," McCracken said.

Unlike cigarettes, McCracken said there little research indicating that 
secondhand marijuana smoke is harmful.

"You'd have to be in a closed car smoking Bob Marley, Cheech and Chong 
joints for a long time to test positive from (secondhand) marijuana (use)," 
she said.

Another prevalent myth, according to the ONDCP, is that marijuana does not 
make a person lose control.

While driving under the influence of marijuana, one may be able to 
manipulate the steering wheel but not react in time if a child ran out into 
the street, McCracken said. She said there is currently research being 
conducted using driving simulators to generate a more accurate account of 
why smoking marijuana impairs driving.

Another reason marijuana might be dangerous is because it shuts off the 
vomiting center in a person's body, McCracken said. She said this could be 
dangerous when a person consumes high quantities of alcohol and then smokes 
marijuana. The person may be suffering from alcohol poisoning while they 
are unable to vomit.

The other side of the debate is the legislative issues. Marijuana is a 
Schedule One classified drug, which means it is said to have a high 
potential for abuse and is not acceptable for medical use in the U.S., 
according to the NORML Report. This restricts California and Arizona, two 
states that have legalized the medicinal marijuana use, from implementing 
their state plans.

Currently in Colorado, possession of small amounts of marijuana is 
classified as a petty offense, said Bob Chaffee, captain of the CSU Police 
Department.

"If caught with a small amount of marijuana, you could be fined up to $500 
or six months in jail," Chaffee said.

If caught with marijuana as a CSU student, there may also be disciplinary 
actions taken through the university's judicial affairs," Chaffee said.

Chaffee emphasized if marijuana is legalized, a person would still not be 
allowed to drive under its influence. He said he could not foresee how 
legalization would change law enforcement for him; he would continue 
enforce the law.

CSU students have variety of opinions on this debated topic.

"To say pot should be legal just because it's not as bad as alcohol or 
cigarettes is just as pointless as saying it should be illegal just because 
it's a dangerous drug. It's not for everybody and it not a black and white 
issue," said Pete Schulman, a junior philosophy major.

One CSU student brought up social interaction as an issue that should be 
included in the legalization debate.

"I don't think marijuana should be legalized," said Ian Van Able, a 
freshman Spanish and sociology major. "I have seen way to many of my 
friends decide that drugs are more important than our friendship."

For some students the issue comes down to their rights.

"It's completely ridiculous (the federal government) can have any drug 
laws. It's unconstitutional and against our freedoms, but no one seems to 
mind," Schulman said.

Some students are against legalization because of a fear of higher prices.

"I think it should be legal to do it in the privacy of your own home and to 
grow it, but if it's legal, they'll put too many taxes on it and 
regulations," said Corey DeRosa, a sophomore business major.

Some CSU students sell marijuana, and would be unable to do so if legalized.

"I don't want it to be legalized because I sell it," said John, a senior 
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