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Prosecutors are urged to fight against legalizing drugs like marijuana
Standard Democrat(Mississippi) | 12/29/02 | Scott Welton

Posted on 01/02/2003 5:17:17 AM PST by Sparta

BENTON - Prosecutors around the country are being urged to take a stand against attempts to legalize or decriminalize controlled substances - in particular, marijuana.

“Those who support drug legalization are well funded and highly adept at manipulating the media,” reads a Nov. 1 letter to prosecutors from the president of the National District Attorneys Association, Dan M. Alsobrooks. “And they do not mind deceiving the American public as well.”

The letter warns of “incremental victories” by those in favor of legalizing drugs and notes the “key role” local prosecutors play in anti-drug efforts.

Included with the letter was an open letter also dated Nov. 1 from Scott M. Burns, deputy director for state and local affairs for the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy, urging prosecutors “to take a stand publicly and tell Americans the truth” about marijuana and warning of “deceptive campaigns to normalize and ultimately legalize the use of marijuana.”

“I think it would be a nightmare to legalize it,” agreed Scott County Assistant Prosecutor Paul Boyd. “It would lead to so many more people out there high operating machinery and other things.” Boyd will be sworn in as the next county prosecutor at 11:30 a.m. Tuesday.

Of the 16 million drug users in America, 77 percent use marijuana and 60 percent of teenagers in treatment have a primary marijuana diagnosis, according to Burns. “No drug matches the threat posed by marijuana.”

Marijuana, Burns writes in the letter, is not harmless but has risen as a factor in emergency room visits 176 percent since 1994, surpassing heroin.

Burns writes of the increasing potency of marijuana and its addictive properties in addition to being a “gateway drug” for many people.

“I would agree that marijuana is a gateway drug to hardcore drugs,” Boyd said. Marijuana is “the great seducer,” Boyd said, because “it breaks down a person’s defense to say ‘no’ to the harder drugs.”

John McMinn of Charleston, administrator for the Circuit 33 Drug Court, also agrees that marijuana remains a problem for the courts.

According to National Institute of Justice statistics on arrests, 39 percent of the males and 26 percent of the females test positive for marijuana, and 53 percent of male juveniles and 38 percent of female juveniles test positive. “Roughly 80 percent of adult offenders in the 33rd Circuit Court come in with some kind of a drug issue be it alcohol or some other drug,” McMinn said.

“More people enter drug treatment every year because of marijuana as their drug of choice,” he added.

McMinn said a 2001 study of students in grades 8-10 showed 20 percent of 8th graders had used marijuana and 9 percent were current users, defined as having used the drug within the past 30 days. By the 12th grade, nearly half of the students had tried marijuana and 22 percent were current users.

McMinn does think research on medicinal and therapeutic properties should be pursued: “There is still so much research left to be done regarding the use of marijuana - the good and the bad.”

However, “there are other drugs that will work as well as marijuana,” he added, with some of the alternatives being more addictive and others that are just as effective while being safer.


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Extended News; Government; News/Current Events; Philosophy; US: Mississippi
KEYWORDS: addictedlosers; druglawskill; drugskill; jobprotection; willprosecuteforfood
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Comment #81 Removed by Moderator

To: OWK
No OWK, he's really on to us. He has spotted our secret agenda and knows that we oppose the duopoly only to set ourselves up as despots, dictators and puppet masters.
82 posted on 01/02/2003 7:05:59 AM PST by jayef
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To: jayef
And we'd have gotten away with it too, if it wasn't for Kevin and Shaggy, and the rest of those meddling kids.
83 posted on 01/02/2003 7:07:00 AM PST by OWK
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To: rastus macgill
Yeah. I've seen it happen. Paranoia is a bitch.
84 posted on 01/02/2003 7:07:29 AM PST by jayef
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To: OWK
;-)
85 posted on 01/02/2003 7:08:03 AM PST by jayef
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To: firebrand
Not to mention the fact that friends who smoke pot are more likely to have stronger drugs that they will, in social situations, pressure people to take,

With that above statement you are disqualified from ever discussing pot as well,
your friends that smoke it are more likely to push other drugs,
Dude turn off that Refer Madness Movie it has warped your brain.
86 posted on 01/02/2003 7:08:33 AM PST by vin-one
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To: Kevin Curry
Man! You sure are doin' some weird sh*t!

Don't never mix the red pills with the little purple ones again!

The orderly might cut back on your TV access...no more SpongeBob for you!!

We know you're ill; please get well. Sincerely.
87 posted on 01/02/2003 7:10:46 AM PST by headsonpikes
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Comment #88 Removed by Moderator

Comment #89 Removed by Moderator

To: PenguinWry
I was with you, right up until the "subsidize" part.
90 posted on 01/02/2003 7:16:59 AM PST by OWK
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To: OWK
Besides being ignorant, he's a little cranky too, isn't he?

FReegards

91 posted on 01/02/2003 7:20:57 AM PST by MileHi
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To: MileHi
Good to see you my friend.
92 posted on 01/02/2003 7:22:43 AM PST by OWK
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Comment #93 Removed by Moderator

To: OWK
They just refuse to be afraid of what he's afraid of, and the only way to make himself look like less of a coward is to try and make them look like fools.
94 posted on 01/02/2003 7:24:30 AM PST by tacticalogic
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To: PenguinWry
Government subsidy of anything is immoral and counter-productive.
95 posted on 01/02/2003 7:24:47 AM PST by OWK
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To: TBall
"It would be helpful if they included the actual numbers that make up the percentages"

That's EXACTLY why you don't see it, my FRiend...the WarOnSomeDrugs is a sham and can only be continued by resorting to lies, deceipt, and propaganda by those in Power.

The Truth would Destroy the WarOnSomeDrugs so it is eschewed by the Federal Leviathan...MUD

96 posted on 01/02/2003 7:26:00 AM PST by Mudboy Slim
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Comment #97 Removed by Moderator

To: firebrand
Marijuana is a psychoactive drug. If it weren't, nobody would bother taking it. It is a dangerous drug that has landed people in the hospital.

Marijuana is a psychoactive drug, yes, but it's a drug that has no achievable overdose level. It is humanly impossible to smoke enough weed to OD. Unless you can provide statistics that show the number of patients who land in the hospital because of an adverse reaction to marijuana, your statement is interesting, but it's your opinion only.

And of course it is a gateway. Just think about it, even on the purely psychological level. Not to mention the fact that friends who smoke pot are more likely to have stronger drugs that they will, in social situations, pressure people to take, or even, as happened to me, put stronger drugs in a supposed reefer.

Marijuana is absolutely not a gateway drug, and this, plus the assumption that marijuana smoking makes black jazz musicians rape innocent white girls, is the most ridiculous thing ever posited by the pro-WoD side. There is nothing inherent in marijuana that makes one, after smoking marijuana, desire harder, stronger drugs. Science has debunked the gateway theory time and time again---check any WoD thread on FR for proof.

As for your marijuana-smoking friends who've "moved on" to harder drugs and your dealer pals who tried to push you on to them or sell you laced grass, I'd say it's high time you find a better class of people to hang out with. It sounds like you've surrounded yourself with some real grade-A arseholes, and that's coloring your opinion in this matter.


98 posted on 01/02/2003 7:36:29 AM PST by Hemingway's Ghost
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To: PenguinWry
Government treatment programs are also immoral and socialistic.
99 posted on 01/02/2003 7:46:57 AM PST by OWK
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To: PenguinWry
Where does this notion that heroin and cocaine addicts, given unfettered access to their drug of choice, would abuse them to the point of death inside of a year? Does your only experience with hard drugs come from movies like
Trainspotting and Requiem for a Dream? Come on!
100 posted on 01/02/2003 7:48:53 AM PST by jayef
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