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The U.S. Department of Justice says that
alcohol plays a pivotal role in two-thirds of all cases of violence
against an intimate (a spouse, boyfriend, girlfriend), and blames
alcohol for contributing to 100,000 sexual assaults against young
people every year. That's right, alcohol hurts more people than al
Qaeda.
Of course, alcohol does not always lead every consumer of it to
violence. Most people who drink alcohol don't hurt anyone. But a large
percentage of those who do get violent have been drinking alcohol.
Should we ban it? We tried that once with miserable results, and we've
banned other substances with equally bad outcomes.
We could stop promoting alcohol so heavily, but the impact of doing so
would probably not be large. What to do? Well, what if there were a
substitute for alcohol that didn't make anyone violent? What if this
substitute were far less dangerous than alcohol to the health of the
person using it, as well as to those around him or her? What if this
alternative substance even had health benefits and medicinal properties
and potentials? What if this substance satisfied the desire for
intoxication without actually containing anything toxic, and you woke
up the next morning without a hangover? What if this magical substitute
for alcohol could boost the economy, free prisoners, reduce prison
budgets, free up police to address serious crimes, and subtly improve
our culture if only we could discover what it was?
The common name for this life-saving drug is marijuana, and in
"Marijuana Is Safer: So Why Are We Driving People to Drink?" the
authors Steve Fox, Paul Armentano, and Mason Tvert argue for legalizing
marijuana as a regulated substitute to reduce the societal damage done
by alcohol. In the book's foreword, Norm Stamper, former Chief of the
Seattle Police Department, writes:
"I've been asking police officers throughout the U.S. (and Canada) two
questions. First: 'When's the last time you had to fight someone under
the influence of marijuana?' (And by this I mean marijuana only, not
pot plus a six-pack or 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. It's telling that the booze question is answered
in terms of hours, not days or weeks."
The case for making pot more available to those who might choose it
over alcohol seems straightforward. Unless, of course, you've heard any
of the pervasive myths that have been spread about it in this country
for nearly a century. In 1927, lacking any Iraqi aluminum tubes to
peddle yet, the New York Times published this fantasy:
"Mexican Family Go Insane "Five Said to Have Been Stricken By Eating Marihuana "A
widow and her four children have been driven insane by eating the
Marihuana plant, according to doctors, who say there is no hope of
saving the children's lives and that the mother will be insane for the
rest of her life"."
This is not terribly different from the stories promoted by our
government today, and much of the book is devoted to debunking myths.
While television networks are not required to give back even a smidgen
of our airwaves for political campaigns or information, they have been
required to air anti-pot propaganda, or to incorporate it into the
plots of shows (such as "ER" and "Beverly Hills 90210"). In 2005, the
Government Accountability Office determined that the government's
anti-pot campaign had violated the law against covert propaganda by
producing video news releases that news programs aired as if they had
been created completely independently of the government.
When Olympic swimmer Michael Phelps was shown in a photograph using
marijuana, both USA Swimming and the US Olympic Committee came down
hard on him, just as the NFL does to its players. These are all
organizations that live off massive funding from the makers of alcohol.
So, incidentally, do members of Congress. It's a good thing THEY are
never influenced by money.
David Swanson is the author of the new book "Daybreak: Undoing the
Imperial Presidency and Forming a More Perfect Union" by Seven Stories
Press. |