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Pot vs. Booze: A Former Police Chief's Take |
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Written by SAFER
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Wednesday, 22 April 2009 |
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There was a fantastic piece published at Alternet and the Huffington Post by our good friend Norm Stamper, who was formerly the chief of the Seattle Police Dept. and is now an author and advisory board member for Law Enforcement Against Prohibition (LEAP) and NORML.
We strongly encourage you to check it out for yourself, but here is a great excerpt: Over the past four years I've asked police officers throughout the
U.S. (and in Canada) two questions. When's the last time you had to
fight someone under the influence of marijuana? (I'm talking marijuana
only, not pot plus a six-pack or a fifth of tequila.) My colleagues
pause, they reflect. Their eyes widen as they realize that in their
five or fifteen or thirty years on the job they have never had to fight
a marijuana user. I then ask: When's the last time you had to fight a
drunk? They look at their watches. All of which begs the question. If one of these two drugs is
implicated in dire health effects, high mortality rates, and physical
violence--and the other is not--what are we to make of our nation's
marijuana laws? Or alcohol laws, for that matter.
Anybody out there want to launch a campaign for the re-prohibition
of alcohol? Didn't think so. The answer, of course, is responsible
drinking. Marijuana smokers, for their part, have already shown (apart
from that little matter known as the law) greater responsibility in
their choice of drugs than those of us who choose alcohol.
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