Pubdate: Sat, 29 Sep 2007
Source: Aspen Times (CO)
Contact:  2007 Aspen Times
Website: http://www.aspentimes.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3784
Author: John Colson
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal)

MY GOOD FRIEND AND THE FOOLISH WAR ON DRUGS

I have a good friend who smokes more pot than anyone I've ever known, 
and he does it legally, at least when he's in his home state of California.

Toby [can't give you his real name, those assholes at Homeland 
Security might be reading this] is one of those guys who lives to 
laugh, and whose laugh goes far beyond infectious.

When we walk through desert canyons - one of our favorite activities 
- - and Toby starts to laugh, you expect the rocks to chuckle right 
along, or at least crack a smile.

When he's in a room full of people, forget about it. If he starts in 
laughing, anyone nearby had better put down their glass or their 
plate and just give in to the mirth. Saves on carpet cleaning bills that way.

But ol' Toby's got his serious side. He hates war, despises 
corporations for their dehumanizing effect on American politics and 
society, is a tree-hugger and an animal rights activist and proud of 
it. One of his favorite activities, besides getting stoned and 
walking in the desert, is going to political rallies and protests and 
sticking his thumb in the eye of whichever establishment baddie is 
the subject of the day.

He's a teacher at a metropolitan college, has been for decades, and 
although I've never been in his classroom, I can imagine his students 
like him almost as much as I do. I've known him since high school, 
and can't imagine life without him on the planet somewhere, laughing.

Oh, did I mention he's got Hepatitis C?

That's a blood-born disease that can cause liver failure, is mighty 
tough to cure, and is one of those maladies that nobody likes to talk 
about. That's because it can be contracted through the use of 
intravenous drugs, which may be how Toby caught it in his wild, 
tempestuous youth, while he was learning to laugh.

Anyway, the Hep-C complication is why Toby can smoke pot legally in 
California (and in Colorado, for that matter), thanks to a voter 
approved initiative legalizing the medical use of marijuana to manage 
pain and other symptoms. He buys it at a local dispensary, which is a 
lot like a pharmacy only the wares are kept in sealed jars, and the 
place smells like a warren of very active skunks, thanks to all the 
high-grade pot. He says the marijuana prescription has helped him 
fend off the disease, stay active in all his pursuits and keep up a 
relatively cheerful outlook on life, even though he is in constant 
anxiety about his own mortality.

And now to the nut of this tale. This week we were treated to 
televised images of Drug Enforcement Administration storm troopers 
busting dispensaries in southern California. The agents were 
basically spitting in the eyes of all those voters who concluded that 
someone smoking pot to ease pain and discomfort was not a threat to 
national security or anyone else's well-being.

The scenes, repeated on TV news shows across the spectrum of cable 
channels, got me thinking.

The voters have passed these laws, presumably while in their right 
minds without any coercion from wild-eyed, gun-toting pot dealers 
lurking in the shadows of their voting booths. It's generally 
presumed that somewhere between 5 and 10 percent of Americans use pot 
with some regularity, and that many more have tried it at least once, 
and they seemed to have generally survived the exposure.

But our federal watchdogs have decided we, the voters in several 
states, don't know what we're doing when it comes to deciding which 
substances we consider beneficial or at least therapeutic, despite a 
growing body of evidence that we are right.

You see, the war on drugs, which has been estimated to cost more than 
$40 billion in 2003 and which is getting more expensive every year, 
has become an industry unto itself. And it guarantees its own 
survival by setting up a never-ending struggle with the drug cartels, 
who benefit from our insane drug laws because they keep drugs in the 
"contraband" category, allowing them to continue to make money. It's 
a lovely little dance they have going, isn't it?

Meanwhile, people's lives are made worse by all this foolishness. 
Toby faces pain and misery if he can't get the one drug that truly 
helps him. Neighborhoods face street wars and urban blight because 
the thugs and the cops are engaged in this endless ballet of bullets 
and jail cells, all paid for by our taxes.

What is wrong with this picture? You tell me.
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom