Pubdate: Tue, 19 Feb 2002 Source: Langley Advance (CN BC) Copyright: 2002 Lower Mainland Publishing Group Inc. Contact: http://www.langleyadvance.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1248 Authors: Stephen Heath, Gerald M. Sutliff, Clifford A. Schaffer Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v02/n267/a08.html DRUGS: RECOGNITION APPRECIATED Dear Editor, Thank you for your consideration and your selection of my letter [Drugs: Media too lax, Feb. 15 Letters, Langley Advance News] to your newspaper. I appreciate the chance to participate. As someone who works actively to promote honest drug policy and drug information in the media, I write to many newspapers. This is the first time I have been printed in your country. Thanks for making me international! Cheers from Clearwater, Florida, USA. Stephen Heath, Drug Policy Forum of Florida - ---------------------------------------------- DRUGS: USE GOD'S GIFTS WISELY Dear Editor, Mr. White makes an excellent point [Drugs: God gave us cannabis, Feb. 15 Letters, Langley Advance News], but I don't think that kind of thinking will expand many people's tolerance for marijuana smokers. I and many of my generation were raised with ideas such as, "Lips that taste wine will never touch mine." However, I wasn't taught that the sandals and clothes that Christ wore to the cross were most likely made with hemp, a.k.a. marijuana, as were the under-armour garments worn by the soldiers who put Him there. My point is that it's the use to which God's gifts are put that matters. Let's hear it for medicinal marijuana and industrial hemp. What are we afraid of? Gerald M. Sutliff, Oakland, California - --------------------------------------------- DRUGS: PROHIBITION CAUSED PROBLEMS Dear Editor, Frank G. Sterle is simply incorrect when he asserts that alcohol prohibition in the US reduced alcohol consumption [Drugs: Legalization around the corner, Feb. 15 Letters, Langley Advance News]. The truth is that pre-prohibition use reached a peak in about 1911 and fell every year thereafter until 1922. Prohibition began in 1920. From 1922 to the end of prohibition in 1933, consumption rose steadily. By 1926, arrests for public drunkenness and similar crimes rose to record levels - almost 30 per cent above the previous record year of 1911. According to the US National Commission on Marihuana and Drug Abuse (1972), overall consumption during prohibition was about 11 per cent higher than before prohibition. Even worse was the fact that prohibition caused the first major drug epidemic among children. Admissions of teens to hospitals for alcohol-related problems soared to levels never seen before. School officials had to cancel school dances because so many kids showed up with hip flasks full of whiskey. Some of the early supporters of prohibition turned against it because of its effect on their own children. Before prohibition, their children found it difficult to get alcohol. After prohibition started, there was no regulatory control at all on the sellers, and bootleggers discovered (as modern drug dealers have discovered) that children made excellent couriers for both booze and money. Prohibition was passed with a campaign of "Save the Children from Alcohol." It was repealed with a campaign of "Save the Children from Prohibition." Historically speaking, the biggest single cause of drug epidemics is hysterical anti-drug campaigns. Clifford A. Schaffer, Agua Dulce, California - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake