Pubdate: Sun, 13 Jan 2008 Source: Times Argus (Barre, VT) Copyright: 2008 Times Argus Contact: http://www.timesargus.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/893 Author: Kathleen Daye, MD LEGALIZING POT WOULD STYMIE FLOW OF HARD DRUGS Thank you for publishing Attorneys Robert Sand's and Daniel Sedon's very thoughtful essays in the Sunday Perspective section Jan. 6 on the serious legal and social harm resulting from marijuana prohibition. I am writing to encourage continued discussion and to add a few points. First, as a doctor, I know that marijuana is a safe, effective and inexpensive medication. It relieves nausea and pain. It is not addictive. There is no risk of death by overdose. Marijuana's effects on mental processes are temporary. It does not cause brain damage. Secondly, as a citizen-observer, may I suggest that legally available homegrown marijuana might deal a severe blow to the black market in hard drugs such as meth, heroin and cocaine. Dealers of hard drugs would no longer be making money on marijuana and, most importantly, they would lose access to the large market of recreational marijuana users. In other words, large numbers of would-be marijuana users, often young people, will not be pushed into contact with criminal elements in order to obtain marijuana. Specifically, they will no longer be at risk of being enticed into trying the dangerous white-powder drugs, which are the most profitable to the black market. The possibility that legalizing marijuana could thus help to stifle the flow of hard drugs into our state is an important consideration, needing more input from Vermont's criminal justice professionals. Kathleen Daye, MD Waterbury - --- MAP posted-by: Derek