Pubdate: Mon, 29 Jun 2015
Source: Province, The (CN BC)
Copyright: 2015 Postmedia Network Inc.
Contact: http://www2.canada.com/theprovince/letters.html
Website: http://www.theprovince.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/476
Author: Gordon Clark
Page: 14

THINK POT IS BENIGN? IT'S NOT WHAT COLORADO HAS LEARNED

The nonsense and outright lies that the cannabis quacks profess in 
using the red herring of "medical" marijuana as a wedge issue toward 
their ultimate goal of fully legal weed can be divided into two 
groups of assertions.

In one are their various claims that marijuana is an all-natural 
wonder drug that can treat and cure a long list of ailments. 
Scientists and doctors tell us that's crap. With very few exceptions, 
studies show that marijuana is useless to treat disease and in most 
cases where it works, there are other better treatments.

The second group of arguments the pot lobby used to justify giving 
them freer access to marijuana is to claim that liberal cannabis laws 
do not harm society - in fact, they claim, it makes the world a better place.

Don't try telling that to Thomas Gorman, director of the Rocky 
Mountain High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area, a U.S. federal 
drug-enforcement program that co-ordinates local, state and federal 
police in enforcing drug laws.

In a presentation to a recent conference on drug and alcohol abuse in 
Idaho attended by Doug Rogers, a substance-abuse prevention 
counsellor with the Vernon School District, Gorman listed a long list 
of social woes that have exploded in Colorado since that state first 
allowed medical marijuana in 2000, saw its use grow exponentially in 
2009 after a court ruling and then legalized recreational marijuana in 2012.

As a result, Gorman said, Colorado now has 866 medical-marijuana 
centres and recreational pot shops compared with 405 Starbucks 
outlets. Denver alone has 198 medical marijuana centres compared with 
117 real pharmacies.

Here are some other fun facts from Colorado for the next time someone 
tells you that massively expanding access to marijuana has no 
negative consequences on society:

The percentage of fatal motor-vehicle accidents in Colorado where the 
driver tested positive for marijuana rose to 16.5 per cent in 2012 
from 6.9 per cent in 2006, according to the U.S. National Highway 
Transportation Safety Administration.

Homeless shelters experienced a 25- to 500-per-cent increase in 
clients after pot was legalized, Gorman said. As well, the number of 
crimes in Denver climbed by 12.3 per cent from 2012 to 2014 after pot 
became legal.

Despite rules that limit pot sales to those 21 and older, kids in 
Colorado have also been adversely affected. In Colorado, 11.2 per 
cent of 12- to 17-year-olds reported having used pot in the past 
month in 2013, compared with 8.3 per cent in 2006-08 and also 
compared with the 2013 national average of 7.2 per cent.

And don't think that easier access to pot in Colorado didn't hurt kids.

Gorman noted that, according to the Colorado Department of Education, 
the state experienced a 34-per-cent increase in drug-related 
suspensions and expulsions from school from the years before pot laws 
were liberalized compared with after. The percentage of drug-related 
school suspensions, which was a constant three per cent of all 
suspensions after pot commercialization was allowed in 2009, has 
grown every year since, hitting 6.4 per cent in the 2013-14 school year.

The same was true for school expulsions involving drugs. Before 2009, 
the percentage of expulsions involving drugs was about 25 per cent, 
but it climbed immediately after pot laws were relaxed and hit 42 per 
cent of all school expulsions in 2013-14.

So much for the claim that we can keep pot out of the hands of 
teenagers by making it legal.

Gorman's agency listed other consequences in another report in August 
about mile-high Colorado:

- - From 2011 through 2013, there was a 57-per-cent increase in 
pot-related emergency-room visits.

- - Marijuana-related exposures for children five years old and less on 
average increased 268 per cent from 2006-09 to 2010-13.

- - The number of pets poisoned from ingesting marijuana increased 
fourfold from 2008 to 2014.

As I've said many times, I don't care if adults want to smoke dope 
and I don't want people going to jail for simple possession. But 
let's not kid ourselves into thinking pot is benign or the fabulous 
lifestyle choice some people claim.

It's telling that having experienced the most liberal state pot laws 
in the U.S., that the majority of counties and cities in Colorado 
have banned recreational marijuana businesses. They may know 
something it will take us a couple of years to learn.
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom