Pubdate: Sun, 15 Feb 2009
Source: Buffalo News (NY)
Copyright: 2009 The Buffalo News
Contact:  http://www.buffalonews.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/61
Authors: Jason Flom, And Anthony Papa
Note: Jason Flom is president of Lava Records. Anthony Papa  is
communications specialist of the Drug Policy  Alliance.
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?420 (Cannabis - Popular)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/michael+phelps

PHELPS SHOULD NOT BE DEMONIZED FOR A SINGLE MISTAKE

Thousands of stories across the country have captured the plight of
Michael Phelps and his recent bong incident. Phelps has apologized
for his youthful  indiscretion. It seems that his apology was accepted
by  most Americans, including the corporate sponsors that gave Phelps
lucrative contracts for his endorsements.

Only one spoiler is making noise about the incident. Sheriff Leon
Lott of Richland County has said that he will charge Phelps with a
crime if he determines he smoked marijuana.

Coincidently the Phelps story broke the same day that Santonio Holmes
became MVP of Super Bowl XLII. Let's put this in context.

Phelps won an astounding 14 gold medals at the Olympics. Holmes
earned honors during last week's Super Bowl when he caught the
winning touchdown in the closing seconds.

Both athletes felt the thrill of victory in sports. They've also had
to address their drug use in the press. It seems like heroics are not
enough to cancel out the government's zero-tolerance policy when it 
comes to recreational drug use.

Maybe both of these athletes should have known better. But even our
greatest sports heroes are human beings who make mistakes. Both
Phelps and Holmes are no different from millions of other Americans
who use marijuana, either recreationally or medically.

Let's be honest. Olympic gold medals and bong hits don't mix well
with mainstream America. Phelps should know this. But maybe because
he is a normal 23-year-old, he forgot.

Holmes has come a long way since his arrest in 2008 for the
possession of three marijuana-filled cigars. Holmes received a
one-game suspension and was allowed to continue the season without
further punitive action.  Holmes was able to overcome this mid-season
stumble and recover to be the hero of the Steelers' record sixth 
Super Bowl title.

But a government hell-bent on continuing an unwinnable war on drugs
has little regard for mistakes. Take the case of Mitchell Lawrence,
an 18-year-old Massachusetts resident, who was sentenced in 2006 to
two years in  prison for possession of a single marijuana joint. His 
life is forever ruined.

People who use drugs and people who wrestle with addiction are
routinely demonized by the so-called moral majority. This is wrong.
Many people struggle with addiction and it should be addressed in a
medical  context, not a criminal, punitive one.

For every person who struggles with drugs and drug addiction, there
are millions of others who use drugs recreationally, and responsibly.
Phelps and Holmes are two high-profile examples.

The moral majority might try to follow Lott's lead and call for
Phelps' head. But Phelps is still a hero to America and his career
should not go up in smoke because of a single mistake. Holmes is a
testament to  this.

Jason Flom is president of Lava Records. Anthony Papa  is
communications specialist of the Drug Policy  Alliance.
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MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin