Pubdate: Mon, 23 Feb 1998 Date: February 23, 1998 Source: Toronto Star Author: George Higton One is once again appalled at the breezy resort to misinformation and misrepresentation that drug "experts" have trotted out, predictably, in the wake of the marijuana imbroglio surrounding Olympic snowboarding gold medalist Ross Rebagliati in Nagano, Japan. Those quoted in Louise Brown's column, "Growing Pains" (Feb 16), still insist, despite every reputable study's contrary findings and which studies one might reasonably expect such dedicated professionals to have read, that marijuana "is the stepping stone to harder chemicals" or that it is "addictive." It is perhaps to be expected that those whose livelihoods depend on maintaining an aura of danger around the dried flower that is cannabis would panic, when with every passing day it becomes clearer that Canadians have lost all patience with our country's absurd and draconian drug laws. At the very least, however, one might expect the members of their self-interested little cabal to blush when making a none-too-subtle association between marijuana and AIDS. Perhaps being a marijuana alarmist in an era when it begins to ring a little hollow "impairs judgement" every bit as much as any drug. Many thousands of parents in Canada have had and continue to have experience with marijuana, and so will their children. Rather than raising rhetorical, calculated, leading questions to do with already settled issues around health and marijuana (ask Rebagliati), peer standing and marijuana, and so on, why not put a more pertinent question to parents: Do you feel that your child should be jailed, as have 3,000 other Canadian young people every year, for smoking a joint? George Higton Toronto, Ontario, Canada