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US: Going Up in Smoke?

William W. Savage III

OUDaily

Wednesday 19 Apr 2006

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In Oklahoma, the law is almost simple — marijuana is illegal.

But the issues behind America's most fought-against drug are much more
complicated.

“The drug war is very profitable,” said Ron Shewey, president of the
Drug Policy Forum of Oklahoma and advocate of Oklahoma's Compassionate
Care Campaign.

“The police and prisons are the two largest growing industries in
America today,” Shewey said. “We've now got 2.2 million people behind
bars in America. We're No. 1 in incarceration per capita in the world,
and a substantial amount of that is drug war. Here in Oklahoma, 32
percent of our prison population is there for drugs.”

In 2002, there were 11,167 arrests for marijuana in Oklahoma, just more
than 50 percent of all drug arrests for the year and 6.7 percent of
total state arrests, according to the National Organization for the
Reform of Marijuana Laws (NORML) Almanac of State Marijuana Statistics.

coverstory

“The thing about cannabis, or marijuana, is it's actually one of the
least harmful substances that people use, if you compare it to tobacco
or even prescription drugs,” Shewey said. “I guess the distinct
difference is that tobacco kills about 270,000 people a year.”

Shewey added that diet kills about 330,000 people a year, while alcohol
kills 430,000 a year.

“The government's statistics show us about 17,000 people a year die from
all illicit substances combined,” he said. “But marijuana has never
killed anybody, as far as anyone knows.”

Shewey said 12 states have passed laws allowing medicinal marijuana.
Oklahoma is not one of them.

And while Shewey said the Oklahoma Compassionate Care Campaign has
received grants to analyze the legislature's interest to pass medical
marijuana legislation, state representatives don't see that happening
any time soon.

campus

“There would have to be a big educational effort with the public because
the public still views marijuana in the same class as other dangerous
drugs,” said District 44 State Rep. Bill Nations, D-Norman. “What
happened to marijuana is that, it may be much more innocent than
methamphetamine and heroin, but in the '60s, it got put into that
dangerous category of drugs.”

Nations said individuals who are arrested, fined and even incarcerated
for marijuana possession are not necessarily being helped by the
criminal justice system.

“The state budget would be better served if we treat a substance
abuser,” he said. “The incarceration system only better educates abusers
about how to abuse. They come out worse.

“We also incarcerate the mentally ill who need treatment and not
incarceration. So our system is not as enlightened as we'd probably like
to have it be.”

That's one reason State Rep. Thad Balkman, R-Norman, has supported drug
courts and treatment plans in Oklahoma, helping to allocate $8 million
last year and $8 million more this year.

Online Poll
Have you ever smoked marijuana?
18.5 percent--Yes, frequently
20 percent--Yes, occasionally
61.5 percent--No, never
Total votes 135

Still, Balkman said he doesn't favor changes in marijuana laws.

“I'm not real high on marijuana, no pun intended,” he said. “I've seen
far too many times when individuals and families have had their lives
destroyed by substances abuse ... by alcohol and marijuana. And lots of
times, they've told me it all started with experimentation with alcohol
and marijuana.”

Asked if there is a way to use marijuana responsibly, Balkman said, “Not
that I'm aware of. I don't think there is.”

Shewey disagrees.

“I'd equate it to the binge drinker,” he said. “There's the guys that go
out on Friday nights who have a couple of beers, drink responsibly and
then go home. But then there's the guy who starts with a beer, has a
couple of shots, a few more beers, some more shots and then he's three
times the legal limit, and then he's on the verge of death because he's
abused alcohol — that's what I equate it to.”

Nations also said an argument exists for marijuana to be treated like
alcohol.

Ralph Hamerla, Honors College professor, said it is socially
counter-productive for marijuana smokers to be deemed criminals.

"Decriminalization is not a bad idea in my point of view,” Hamerla said.
“I've been to a lot of countries around the world, and the way we treat
things here is a little asinine and pointless ... and expensive. But a
lot of people have a lot invested in the war on drugs.”

Hamerla teaches a perspectives course in the Honors College called,
“What is Science?" Students recently read the book, “Marijuana Myth,
Marijuana Fact" for the class and discussed how statistics and analysis
have been manipulated to vilify the substance since the Harrison
Narcotics Tax Act in 1914.

“People's lives are destroyed by this,” Hamerla said. “Not by the actual
item itself, but by the policies we choose to subscribe to in this
country regarding its legal status. You can look at the history of
marijuana and see where all these laws come from. They're clearly geared
to demonizing the substance for the purpose of someone's career goals.”

As for the state of marijuana in Oklahoma politics, Hamerla said there
are several reasons for resistance to decriminalization or medicinal
legalization.

“It's going to take generations. I would argue, in this situation, the
culture has to change first,” Hamerla said. “Resistance to the medical
use of marijuana is as much a resistance to the doors that would open as
to the danger of the drug itself.

“In other words, there's an accepted status of marijuana in the legal
system today, and if that’s recognized as malleable in any way, that
threatens to undermine its criminalization as it currently stands.”

Shewey's Compassionate Care Campaign is ultimately looking toward a
ballot initiative.

Cannabis is said to have medicinal benefits, according to multiple
private, state and federally funded studies. Several reports and studies
are available on www.norml.org, the Web site of NORML.

Among other things, cannabis is prescribed for AIDS patients to reduce
nausea, vomiting and appetite loss caused by the disease and by other
medications. Cannabis is also prescribed to combat the same problems
when they stem from chemotherapy.

The drug also has yielded positive results when used to reduce
intraocular pressure in the eyes of glaucoma patients.

Balkman said he is unaware of marijuana having medical benefits.

But Nations said Oklahoma may eventually move toward medicinal legality,
a thought which jives with Balkman's analysis that proponents of
marijuana are becoming a more powerful special interest group in the state.

Still, Nations said Oklahoma's conservative tendencies will delay such a
movement, even if it begins with medicinal legalization.

“Someone would have to say there's a legitimate need and use — here it
is, and here's why we need to do that,” Nations said. “It would have to
come from somewhere in the health care industry. It's not going to be
very effective if there's a college student or a guy on the street
claiming there's great medical benefits for marijuana. You're going to
have to have doctors and medical professionals stand up and say that.”

The Daily left messages for several doctors working in internal
medicine, contacted two, but was unable to find a medical professional
willing to discuss the issue on the record.

Shewey said finding people in health care fields willing to tackle the
issue is hard, but his group has the support of one doctor.

“The rest of the medical community is so afraid of the Feds and the
[Drug Enforcement Agency], it just seems like they're just afraid,” he
said. “They'll tell you privately that they know the benefits, but as
far as here in Oklahoma, they're just afraid. But we need them to have
courage to come out and endorse this campaign.”

 

 

 

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