Pubdate: Wed, 17 Apr 2002 Source: UWM Post, The (WI Edu) Copyright: 2002 The UWM Post Contact: http://www.uwmpost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2130 Author: Robert Merkin Note: Titled by MAP NOT WITH A BANG To the Editor: The most interesting thing about Wisconsin's medical marijuana opinion survey ("Legalizing Medicine," 10 April) is its insight into how America's War on Drugs will end: Not with a police bang, but with a quiet ballot-box whimper. Students (18 or older) and retirees both approve of medical marijuana roughly at a whopping 90 percent. When the 4 percent uncertainty is applied, Republicans and Democrats have nearly equal approval rates, supporting medical marijuana in a middle ground around 81 percent. Not counting the "miscellaneous occupation" category, which probably represents a small and low-confidence sample, the lowest support category is the media market area of Duluth and Superior, where more than seven of every ten adults approve of medical marijuana. All other categories and regions range from mid-70 percent to 90+ percent support for a substance which, by conventional politician and police fear mongering, has been destroying the moral fiber of society for a century. In other words, almost nobody's afraid of the Satan weed from hell anymore, and in the doctor-patient context, whopping Wisconsin majorities find it perfectly appropriate. So the only question is time. How long will it take the die-hard zero- tolerance drug warrior prosecutors, police and legislators to do just that: Die, so the vast majority of citizens can shape policies in a way they find sane and rational? The numbers clearly show that when a 65-year-old lock-em-all-up pot prohibitionist finally retires and lumbers off the political stage, he or she will be quietly replaced by a younger public servant with very different ideas. This week we have learned, sadly, that Wisconsin leads the nation in the rate of African-Americans locked up in its jails and prisons, and most of that for drug offenses. It's long past time for the die-hards to die, easy or hard, so Wisconsin can regain its political sanity and its commitment to racial justice. Robert Merkin - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom