Pubdate: Mon, 11 Aug 2008
Source: Seattle Times (WA)
Copyright: 2008 The Seattle Times Company
Contact:  http://www.seattletimes.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/409
Author: Jerry Large, Seattle Times staff columnist
Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v08/n765/a01.html
Cited: Marijuana: It's Time for a Conversation 
http://www.marijuanaconversation.org/
Video: At http://www.marijuanaconversation.org/interviews/
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Marijuana)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Rick+Steves

PULLING THE LID OFF POT

Marijuana has an image problem.

That's not the only problem with it, but its image probably keeps it 
lurking in the shadows: People who smoke pot are unkempt, unruly, 
counterculture. Best just to drink scotch or pop OxyContin.

If marijuana had the ad agencies that cigarettes have had, it would 
be legal, too.

I'm not craving a joint. It's not my thing, but I noticed that 
Hempfest is coming up this weekend.

Speakers at the Seattle festival will try mightily to pull the weed 
from darkness.

I agree with them that it makes sense to decriminalize marijuana use.

Bring it out into the light, regulate it, tax it, put trafficking 
gangs out of business and let police and courts do more important work.

Rick Steves, the travel entrepreneur from Edmonds, will be one of the 
main speakers at Hempfest.

We had a story in our paper Friday about a television program he and 
the ACLU made to get people talking about marijuana laws 
(marijuanaconversation.org).

Some local television stations were not willing to air the TV show, 
though I can't think of a station that hasn't carried entertainment 
programs in which weed played a part.

I guess it's like sex, which you can display a bit, but not discuss seriously.

Outlawing grass doesn't seem to have the intended effect, assuming 
the intent is to keep people from using.

According to the 2001 National Household Survey on Drug Abuse, more 
than 83 million Americans older than 12 have used marijuana.

Marijuana production earns billions every year.

Think of what we could do with the taxes on legal marijuana. And we'd 
save the $7.5 billion a year the nation spends enforcing pot laws.

One of the big raps against pot is the idea that using it leads to 
using more dangerous drugs.

The other day, I asked a roomful of people about marijuana. One man, 
an educator, said that when he was in high school in 1972, he had a 
drug-education class.

The kids were told marijuana was the same as heroin.

The ones who experimented with it found out it wasn't, and some went 
on to try heroin figuring that since marijuana hadn't done them in 
and heroin was the same, it wouldn't hurt either. How's that for a 
gateway effect?

I'm sure arresting people for using pot has a gateway effect. A 
little time in jail gives a person the opportunity to learn more 
about other drugs and bigger crimes.

But if marijuana were legal, we could institute some controls and 
even have serious conversations about it.

I spoke with Steves, who is in Belgium. He said his interest started 
with "knowing so many people who were closet smokers but couldn't 
talk about it. I thought, 'What if everybody agreed [it should be 
decriminalized] but was too afraid to speak out.' "

He figured maybe people would listen to a straight-laced businessman.

Steves is pushing democracy, not pot. It bothers him that Americans 
shrink from discussing drug laws.

That's a truly sorry image.
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MAP posted-by: Richard Lake