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News (Media Awareness Project) - US FL: Column: Marijuana Still Illegal, And We're Still Stupid
Title:US FL: Column: Marijuana Still Illegal, And We're Still Stupid
Published On:2011-12-27
Source:News-Press (Fort Myers, FL)
Fetched On:2011-12-28 06:01:15
MARIJUANA STILL ILLEGAL, AND WE'RE STILL STUPID

"Play faster!" he cried, wildly, over and over. "Play faster!"

The dame who was tickling the ivories complied, out of control
herself. The music revved to a dangerous velocity oh, too fast for
decent, sober, well-behaved Americans to bear and ... well, you
just knew, violence, madness, laughter were just around the corner.
The year was 1936 and, oh my God, they were high on marijuana, public
enemy No. 1

The scene is from "Reefer Madness," arguably the dumbest movie ever
made but smugly at the emotional and ideological core of American
drug policy for the last three-quarters of a century. The policy,
which morphed in 1970 into an all-out "war" on drugs, has filled our
prisons to bursting, created powerful criminal enterprises, launched
a real war in Mexico and presided over the skyrocketing of
recreational drug use in the United States. The war on drugs just may
be a bigger disaster than the war on terror.

"The war on drugs, as it has been waged, has not only failed to
curtail drug use; it has become a major public health liability in
its own right," writes Christopher Glenn Fichtner in his
comprehensive new book on our disastrous war on a plant,
"Cannabanomics: The Marijuana Policy Tipping Point" (Well Mind Books).

Fichtner, a psychiatrist he served as Illinois director of Mental
Health for several years takes a long, hard look at the politics of
irrationality and lays out a compelling diagnosis: "essentially,
social or mass psychosis." You can also throw in racism. The war on
drugs is simply a race war by another name, fueled by fear of
Hispanic and black culture, with the weight of law brought down on
African Americans with wildly disproportionate severity:

"During a period when the number of prison sentences for drug-related
convictions increased dramatically for all drug offenders," Fichtner
writes, citing Illinois statistics between 1983 and 2002, "it
increased for African-Americans at roughly eight times the rate of
increase seen for Caucasians."

But reading "Cannabanomics" kept leaving me with the sense that there
was a deeper irrationality to our anti-marijuana crusade than even
the racism. For instance, "Examples abound," he writes, "in which the
application of mandatory minimum sentences has led to harsher
penalties for marijuana offenses than for violent crimes ranging from
battery through sexual assault and even to murder."

And the violent enforcement of zero tolerance hasn't been limited to
the pursuit of recreational potheads. Those using cannabis
medicinally have also been harassed, arrested and sometimes treated
with such shocking violence you have to wonder whether the official
paranoia about marijuana use - that it leads to mental derangement
and violent behavior - is sheer projection.

For instance, early in the book Fichtner relates the story of Garry,
a California man who used marijuana to relieve arthritic pain.
Despite the fact that this was legal under state law, his house was
raided by federal agents: "As he opened his front door, he was
greeted by a battering ram and a physical takedown maneuver that left
him with a dislocated left shoulder, right hand fractures, blunt head
trauma, and a back injury that aggravated the arthritis for which he
grew cannabis in his garage in the first place."

Much of "Cannabanomics" is devoted to the extraordinary medicinal
uses of marijuana, which has been called one of the safest
therapeutically-active substances known to the human race. It has
been used, usually with little if any side effect, to alleviate
chronic pain and chemo-induced nausea and relieve the symptoms of a
stunning array of illnesses and conditions, including epilepsy,
multiple sclerosis, rheumatoid arthritis, cerebral palsy, diabetes,
hepatitis C, AIDS, cancer, Tourette's syndrome and Alzheimer's. The
list goes on.

The herb has been "part of humanity's medicine chest for almost as
long as history has been recorded," according to Dr. Gregory T.
Carter, writing on the NORML website.

In light of this, our war against it - at extraordinary human and
economic cost - illuminates a crying need for us to change the way we
govern and look after ourselves. Another story Fichtner tells is
about an Illinois man named Seth, who had suffered from epileptic
seizures most of his life. He reluctantly tried using marijuana one
inhalation a day because his prescribed medications weren't helping
much, and soon reduced the incidence of grand mal seizures from
several per week to one or two per month.

The amazing part of this story, Fichtner notes, is that none of his
doctors were willing even to discuss the therapeutic use of
marijuana, though they were quick to recommend invasive procedures,
including temporal lobe surgery. "We Americans," he writes, "live in
a society in which it is acceptable practice for surgeons to destroy
a piece of someone's brain in order to prevent seizures but where use
of marijuana for the same purpose ... is a criminal offense."

To my mind, it all smacks of the military-industrial metaphor that
rules the American roost. We're quick to seize on something as the
enemy and organize ourselves blindly around its destruction, never
stopping to notice that what we're destroying is ourselves. In the
case of the war on drugs, our "enemy" is our greatest ally.
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