HTTP/1.0 200 OK Content-Type: text/html To Legalize Or Not To Legalize Marijuana?
Pubdate: Wed, 17 Aug 2011
Source: Vail Daily (CO)
Copyright: 2011 Vail Daily
Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/wo3Ts7AI
Website: http://www.vaildaily.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3233
Author: Randy Wyrick

VAIL PANEL: TO LEGALIZE OR NOT TO LEGALIZE MARIJUANA?

VAIL, Colorado - Marijuana can be bad and it generates half the
Mexican drug cartels' money - but what to do about it?

Legalize it, say Jared Polis and Dr. Ethan Nadelmann.

Increase enforcement, say John Suthers and Anthony Coulson.

They had a rhetorical battle royale.

The four offered a preview Tuesday night of what could be one of
Colorado's least mellow debates - legalizing marijuana. The Vail
Symposium hosted the event Tuesday at Vail Mountain School. It will be
broadcast on C-Span.

Suthers is Colorado's Attorney General. Coulson is a former assistant
special agent in charge of the Drug Enforcement Administration's
Tucson office.

Dr. Ethan Nadelmann is head of the Drug Policy Alliance and advocates
for legalization. Polis represents Colorado's 2nd Congressional
District in the U.S. House of Representatives, including Eagle County.

"Here we are 40 years into the drug war. Does anyone think it's been a
success?" Polis asked. "It's time for a different strategy. The vast
majority agrees that the war on drugs is a massive and comprehensive
failure."

The War on Drugs has failed because we have not done enough, Coulson
said.

"We have people who need help who aren't getting it," Coulson said.
"If we invest, in a generation or so hopefully we won't need a DEA."

In a keynote address for NORML's 40th anniversary, Polis said that
he'd introduce a law to decriminalize marijuana.

"Is marijuana harmful? Absolutely. All drugs are potentially harmful,"
Polis said, but marijuana is more comparable to alcohol and cigarettes
than the more dangerous narcotics.

"Marijuana prohibition has caused far more harm than good," Polis
said.

Suther hit back hard.

"You guys need to get out in the streets more," Suthers said. "The
people who want to raise the white flag to drug legalization say the
problems could not be any worse. Folks, they're flat wrong."

In the 1960 and '70s, 14 percent said they used drugs once a month,
Suthers said. In the 1980s, drug use rates fell, and have continued
below what they were 30 years ago.

"You don't see addicts up here advocating for the legalization of
marijuana, or prevention and treatment folks and law enforcement
people on the street," Coulson said.

If you legalize it, it eliminates a huge source of capital for drug
cartels, Nadelmann said, and capital is what cartels need to branch
into other businesses.

"There has never been a drug free society. Drugs are here to stay,"
Nadelmann said. "We have to learn to live with this in our society so
they do the least possible harm and possibly the greatest possible
good."

The negative side effects are found largely in the criminalization,
Nadelmann said.

"We have to reduce the negative consequences of drug use and the
negative consequences of the supply side of drugs. The right way too
deal with it is through the healthcare system," Nadelmann said.
"Freedom, compassion and responsibility, those are my core values."

Polis and Suthers agreed that marijuana and Colorado's medical
marijuana are bad, but disagreed whether people should have legal
access to it.

"It's nothing more than state sanctioned fraud," Suthers said. "I
would prefer the legalization of marijuana to the medicalization, at
least in the system we have now. There are 128,000 medical marijuana
patients in Colorado. The demographic is the same as recreational
marijuana use in Colorado."

"More than 20 percent of those being treated for addiction get access
through a medical marijuana card. When the perception of risk is at
its lowest, use is at its highest," Suthers said.

Polis said he'd prefer legalization to Colorado's current medical
marijuana system, but opposes an outright ban.

Treat it like other legal drugs, Polis said.

"Regulate it, tax it and let the states and communities decide whether
they want it in their borders. Spend the money it generates on
education and treatment programs," Polis said. "This is not a federal
issue."

Marijuana, tobacco and alcohol are bad things and we shouldn't use
them. He doesn't and never has, Polis said.

"I'm happy to be in Colorado, which could be the first state to end
the prohibition against marijuana," Nadelmann said.

But he urged caution in legalization.

"I don't want marijuana sold as a free for all in a 7-11. I was a tax
system that will discourage consumption," he said. "If it passes, and
I hope it does, it's not going to simple and easy."

Legalization doesn't work in other countries, despite what advocates
say, Suther said.

"I've been on these panels a long time. They've talked about various
countries that have legalized drugs and all those countries have
increased rates of drug use," Suther said.

"I come from 28 years of experience on the streets," Coulson said. "I
cannot imagine why you would want to add another thing."
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