Pubdate: Mon, 12 Nov 2007 Source: Daily Tar Heel, The (U of NC, Edu) Copyright: 2007 DTH Publishing Corp Contact: http://www.dailytarheel.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1949 Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v07/n1297/a05.html Author: Allan Erickson PROHIBITION OF MARIJUANA IS WRONG POLICY DECISION Jeff Soplop's column, "What to do about the doobie: part one" ( Nov. 8) was interesting. A tad off base, but interesting. Soplop did get some things right, like when he said "it would be ridiculous if the government outlawed (alcohol and cigarettes)." Yet he is so, so wrong when he says "because marijuana is no more harmful than cigarettes or alcohol doesn't mean that it should be legalized in the United States either." Cannabis (marijuana) is a lot less harmful than either tobacco or alcohol. Monumentally less harmful: 5,000 years of recorded historical use without one fatality from consumption compared to 400,000 deaths each year for tobacco (in the U.S. alone) and another 100,000 from alcohol. Should everyone consume it? No. Should those who do be labeled criminals? No. The prohibition of alcohol failed for very specific reasons. The prohibition of cannabis (and all the other illegal drugs) suffers from the same failures. After 70 years of government efforts to eliminate cannabis as a drug, it is now our nation's No. 1 agricultural commodity, worth more annually than soybeans and corn combined. That is failure, to the nth power. It is not whether pot should be illegal but whether prohibition is a viable policy. Consider the history of cannabis prohibition and you will see a policy founded on lies and xenophobia. Prohibition is the problem, not pot. Allan Erickson Drug Policy Forum of Oregon - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman