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News (Media Awareness Project) - Editorial: Phelps, Pot And Consequences
Title:Editorial: Phelps, Pot And Consequences
Published On:2009-02-03
Source:Dallas Morning News (TX)
Fetched On:2009-02-04 20:00:15
PHELPS, POT AND CONSEQUENCES

Olympian's Bong Photo Is One More Dot To Connect

Were you shocked to see the British tabloid photograph of Olympic swim
champ Michael Phelps firing up a bong at a recent college party? Many
people were no doubt startled, and chagrined, to see the all-American
athlete inadvertently trashing his image.

Many others may have been less surprised that Phelps did the drug than
that he was foolish enough to do so in public, putting his
multimillion-dollar product endorsement deals at risk.

Also Online What's The Big Story? Find out at dallasnews.com/opinion

Blog: Opinion

Phelps has apologized, laying blame at the fact that he's only 23
years old and not exactly a paragon of wisdom. Please. Phelps is a
grown-up and has to own his poor choices. But government statistics do
indicate that the age group most likely to use marijuana is 18 to 25
years old; after that, pot use drops off sharply.

Will young Americans who buy Wheaties because they see Mr. Eight Gold
Medals on the box now be more inclined to inhale pot because they see
him cupping a bong? The decline in stigma attached to marijuana use
could make trying it easier, but it's hard to establish a direct connection.

While it can't please parents that their kids' favorite Olympic
champion is revealed as a recreational drug user, the good news is
that marijuana is less popular today than it was in the late 1970s.

The bad news is the potency is much higher. Research over the last
decade has established a link between marijuana use and forgetfulness,
having to do with the effect of cannabinoids, the pleasure-giving
substance in marijuana, on brain chemistry. And while marijuana is not
addictive in the same way cocaine and alcohol are, scientists have
found evidence that for 10 to 14 percent of the population, developing
a pot dependence is all too easy.

It's also worth thinking of another young Phelps - Rodney Phelps, a
Detroit man profiled by Luke Bergmann in his acclaimed recent book,
Getting Ghost. Rodney Phelps was a young, black, petty dealer whose
life was filled with all the chaos and violence that comes with living
in a city and culture permeated by the drug trade. As Bergmann tells
it, Phelps tried to get out of the life and start anew but was gunned
down, probably by old drug-dealing rivals.

The two Phelpses lived worlds apart, but the famous one's indiscreet
pleasures depend on the daily misery of the obscure one who died young
and in pain. It bears repeating that the names and faces of innocent
Mexicans killed by drug cartels - for whom marijuana is their biggest
moneymaker - will never make it onto a Wheaties box to be seen by the
privileged Americans who, like Michael Phelps, take a recreational
bong hit now and again.

Yet their fates are not so easily separated. That's something pot
smokers like Michael Phelps have to own, too.
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