Pubdate: Sun, 24 Jun 2012
Source: Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)
Column: Capitol Connection
Copyright: 2012 Daily Freeman
Contact:  http://www.dailyfreeman.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3269
Author: Alan Chartock

DEVOTE RESOURCES TO REAL DRUG PROBLEM

WHEN I was a young man, I refused to smoke marijuana when offered the 
opportunity. I thought that it might interfere with my future career.

At that time, I thought I might like to run for Congress and that if 
you were caught, you were disqualified.

Of course, we now know that weed is a rite of passage. Presidents and 
presidential candidates freely admit to drug use.

We also know that white middle class kids and their parents were 
exempt. It's tough to get caught smoking dope when you are on the 
15th floor of a Park Avenue apartment.

ON the other hand, if you are a black or Latino kid on the street 
corners, it is very easy to get stopped and frisked and sent off to jail.

Right now there is a great debate on whether to make marijuana 
possession either legal or almost legal.

I have a doctor friend, one of the top addiction specialists in the 
country, who tells me that marijuana is what we might call a "gateway 
drug." She says that if you start with weed, you often graduate to 
something stronger.

I have great respect for this doctor who has to deal with people who 
have been sucked into drug use, and I find it difficult to dismiss 
her concerns.

Yet the inequalities I mentioned above are also of great concern.

LET there be no mistake about it, alcohol is every bit as dangerous 
as marijuana. In fact, judging from the number of automobile 
accidents every year caused by alcohol abuse, strong drink is much 
more dangerous than marijuana.

Now that the Rockefeller drug laws have been modified, things have 
gotten more sensible. Fewer kids are being put into the system, but 
still there is a glut of arrests among our most disadvantaged citizens.

Some distinguished lawmakers have suggested it is time to legalize 
marijuana, but also other much more deadly

Alan Chartock and heavy drugs. Some have suggested that if we 
legalize cannabis, the same arguments that lead to its legalization 
will be used for other drugs.

Such a debate is really above my pay grade; I certainly can see all 
the arguments for and against it. As long as there is poverty and a 
lack of hope, there will be drug use in this country.

The idea of making marijuana possession a violation like a speeding 
ticket is a step in the right direction. Jail or prison time is just 
not an answer. The only people who make out from that are really 
those who run our gigantic prison industry. We know that there are 
just too many people behind bars.

I certainly think that if we are going to spend that money, we should 
spend it on giving people an economic chance and some hope. I am sure 
that would go further than consigning them to a life of hell sending 
them to jail. Even a history of a violation may well hurt someone's 
chances in life.

We know that cannabis has helped people who are terminal cancer 
patients. Our congressional and legislative hearings are replete with 
such testimony from some very high-ranking people in this country, 
including judges and doctors.

It is hard to believe that there isn't a simple majority, even among 
the Republicans in the state Senate, who haven't used marijuana. That 
makes it rank hypocrisy to criminalize the use. Otherwise I suggest 
that all those sitting in the upper house should turn themselves in. 
I mean, wouldn't that be the right thing to do?

SOMETIMES in life choices have to be made. We know that when we tried 
to criminalize the use of alcohol the result was catastrophic. A 
black market resulted and the criminals got rich. The same thing is 
true with the distribution of marijuana.

The time has come to do the right thing and use available money to 
help people who have developed serious drug problems. Makes a lot 
more sense than what we are doing.
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom