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UVM members of Students for Sensible Drug Policy joined in a national
Drug Safety Awareness day last week to promote marijuana as a safer
alternative to alcohol.
The organization in charge of the national campaign is called SAFER.
Based out of Denver, Colo., SAFER pushes for a national realization
that marijuana is less harmful than alcohol, according to the
organization’s website. “Obviously I’m not trying to force people to do any drug, but to make
it a less biased choice because they really are the two most used
substances, and marijuana is the safer of the two,” junior and
co-president for Students for Sensible Drug Policy (SSDP), Brendan
Miller said.
The campaign stated that alcohol contributes to incredibly high
numbers of overdose deaths, fights and injuries, sexual assaults and
property damage, while marijuana contributes to none of these things.
“I’d like to see an equalization of punishments at the very least,”
Miller said.
Miller said they planned fairly last minute, but they still managed
to reach a few dozen students enjoying the warm weather outside the
Bailey/Howe Library.
“I agree with the idea completely,” freshman Molly McLaughlin said.
“You hear about kids going to the hospital for drinking all the time,
but never for smoking weed.”
There will probably be a bigger event in the future, but so far no
concrete plans had been made, Miller said.
“Public opinion is changing,” he said. “The more support we have,
[the more we] can get things done.”
There is no SAFER group at UVM yet, but maybe the beginning of a UVM
SAFER chapter would be one step in a progressive direction, Miller said. |