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- Path: bloom-beacon.mit.edu!senator-bedfellow.mit.edu!faqserv
- From: Sol Lightman <verdant@student.umass.edu>
- Newsgroups: alt.hemp,alt.answers,news.answers
- Subject: alt.hemp CANNABIS/MARIJUANA FAQ
- Supersedes: <drugs/hemp-marijuana_763338044@rtfm.mit.edu>
- Followup-To: poster
- Date: 10 Apr 1994 08:57:08 GMT
- Organization: University_of_Massachusetts_at_Amherst_Cannabis_Reform_Coalition
- Lines: 1261
- Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.Edu
- Expires: 24 May 1994 08:57:03 GMT
- Message-ID: <drugs/hemp-marijuana_765968223@rtfm.mit.edu>
- Reply-To: verdant@twain.ucs.umass.edu
- NNTP-Posting-Host: bloom-picayune.mit.edu
- Summary: This FAQ contains answers to frequently asked questions about marijuana and industrial hemp legalization.
- Keywords: hemp,marijuana,cannabis,law,legalization,environment
- X-Last-Updated: 1993/09/20
- Originator: faqserv@bloom-picayune.MIT.EDU
- Xref: bloom-beacon.mit.edu alt.hemp:5537 alt.answers:2379 news.answers:17865
-
- Archive-name: drugs/hemp-marijuana
- Version: 0.3
-
-
-
- ALT.HEMP FAQ
-
- (still very incomplete but getting there)
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
- Contributors so far:
-
- Laura Kriho lkriho@psych.colorado.edu
- -- Boulder Hemp Initiative
-
- Brian S. Julin verdant@twain.ucs.umass.edu (Sol Lightman)
- -- UMASS Cannabis Reform Coalition
-
- Marc Anderson andersom@spot.Colorado.EDU
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
-
- This is a list of the most common and toughest questions and concerns
- we've gotten on the street talking to people about hemp re-legalization.
- In order to get our hemp rap tighter and thus be more effective, we should
- all know good answers to these questions. -- L.K.
-
-
- This FAQ is an attempt to fit reams of life-saving, liberty-
- protecting, mind-changing, reality-altering ideas, facts and information
- into as small a space as possible, made readable for everyone in one
- sitting, (who speaks english, sorry -- anyone willing to translate?) As a
- result, much of the superfluous information has been sacrificed to make
- room for more ideas. The information can be found in the sources cited at
- the end, which we encourage everyone to read. --B.S.J.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
-
- CONTENTS:
-
- I) WHAT'S ALL THIS FUSS ABOUT HEMP?
- 1a) What is hemp?
- b) What is cannabis?
- c) Where did the word `marijuana' come from?
- 2a) How can hemp be used as a food?
- b) What are the benefits of hemp compared to other food crops?
- c) How about soy? Is hemp competitive as a world source of protein?
- 3a) How can hemp be used as a fuel?
- b) Why is it better than petroleum?
- 4a) How can hemp be used for cloth?
- b) Why is it better than cotton?
- 5a) How can hemp be used as a medicine?
- b) What's wrong with all the other drugs we have?
- 6a) How can hemp be used to make paper?
- b) Why can't we just keep using trees?
- 7) What other uses for hemp are there?
-
- II) PROHIBITION - WHY?
- 1) How and why was hemp made illegal?
- 2) Wait -- why didn't we pass a better law? Why didn't somebody say
-
- III) DOESN'T IT?, DOES IT?, HOW WOULD?
- 1a) Doesn't Marijuana cause brain damage?
- b) If it doesn't kill brain cells, how does it get you `high'?
- 2) Isn't smoking marijuana worse for you than smoking cigarettes?
- 3) Doesn't marijuana stay in your fatty cells and affect you for up to a
- 4) Is marijuana addictive?
- 5) I heard that there are over 400 chemicals in marijuana... Wellllll... ?
- 6) I forgot, does marijuana cause memory impairment?
- 7) Marijuana impairs the immune system, increasing the
- 8) Hey, don't you know that marijuana drops testosterone levels in
- 9) Doesn't heavy marijuana use lower the sperm count in males?
- 10) I heard marijuana use by teenage girls may impair hormone production,
- 11) Don't children born to pot-smoking mothers suffer from ``Fetal
- 12) Don't people die from smoking pot?
- 13) Isn't marijuana a gateway drug? Doesn't it lead to use of harder
- 14) Can't marijuana cause psychoses in some people?
- 15) Does marijuana impairment cause more driving accidents?
- 16) Is it true that marijuana makes you lazy and unmotivated?
- 17) I don't want children (minors) to be able to smoke marijuana. How
- 18) Won't children be able to steal marijuana plants that people are
- 19) Is urine testing for marijuana use as a term of employment a good
- 20) Go away.
- 21) Isn't marijuana more potent now than in the 60's?
- 22) Shouldn't we just lock them (users) all up?
-
- IV) Why is it STILL illegal?:
-
- V) RESOURCES - (ON-LINE)
-
- VI) Other Resources
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
-
- I) WHAT'S ALL THIS FUSS ABOUT HEMP?
-
-
- 1a) What is hemp?
-
- For our purposes, hemp is the plant called `cannabis sativa.' There
- are other plants that are called hemp, but cannabis hemp is the most useful
- of these plants. In fact, `cannabis sativa' means `useful (sativa) hemp
- (cannabis)'.
-
- `Hemp' is any durable plant that has been used since pre-history for
- many purposes. Fiber is the most well known product, and the word `hemp'
- can mean the rope or twine which is made from the hemp plant, as well as
- just the stalk of the plant that produced it.
-
-
- b) What is cannabis?
-
- Cannabis is the most durable of the hemp plants, and it produces the
- toughest cloth, called `canvass.' (Canvass was widely used as sails in the
- early shipping industry, as it was the only cloth which would not rot on
- contact with sea spray) The cannabis plant also produces three other very
- important products which the other hemp plants do not (in usable form, that
- is): pulp, seed, and medicine.
-
- The pulp is used as fuel, and to make paper. The seed is suitable for
- both human and animal foods. The oil from the seed can be used in as a base
- for paints and varnishes. The medicine is a tincture or admixture of the
- sticky resin in the blossoms and leaves of the hemp plant, and is used for
- a variety of purposes.
-
-
- c) Where did the word `marijuana' come from?
-
- The word `marijuana' is a Mexican slang term which became popular in
- the late 1930's in America, during a series of media and government
- programs which we now refer to as the `Reefer Madness Movement.' It refers
- specifically to the medicine part of cannabis.
-
- Today in the U.S., hemp (meaning the roots, stalk, and stems of the
- cannabis plant) is legal to possess. No one can arrest you for wearing a
- hemp shirt, or using hemp paper. Marijuana (The flowers, buds, or leaves
- of the cannabis plant) is not legal to possess, and there are stiff fines
- and possible jail terms for having any marijuana in your possession. The
- seeds are legal to possess and eat, but only if they are sterilized (will
- not sprout.)
-
- Since it is not possible to grow the hemp plant without being in
- possession of marijuana, the United States does not produce any industrial
- hemp products, and must import them or, more often, substitute others.
-
-
- 2a) How can hemp be used as a food?
-
- Hemp seed is a highly nutritious source of protein and essential fatty
- oils. Many populations have grown hemp for its seed -- most of them eat it
- as `greul' which is a lot like oatmeal. Hemp is competitive to soy in
- protein production.
-
- Hemp seeds have a nutty taste. Hemp leaves can be used as roughage,
- but not without slight psycho-active side-effects. Hemp seeds do not get
- you high.
-
-
- b) What are the benefits of hemp compared to other food crops?
-
- Hemp requires little fertilizer, and grows well almost everywhere. It
- also resists pests, so it uses little pesticides. Hemp puts down deep
- roots, which is good for the soil, and when the leaves drop off the hemp
- plant, minerals are returned to the soil. Hemp has been grown on the same
- soil for twenty years in a row without any noticeable depletion of the
- soil.
-
- Using less fertilizer and agricultural chemicals is good for two
- reasons. First, it costs less and requires less effort. Second, many
- agricultural chemicals are dangerous and contaminate the environment -- the
- less we have to use, the better.
-
- c) How about soy? Is hemp competitive as a world source of protein?
-
- Hemp seed protein more closely resembles that of the human body than
- soy; it is also easier to digest. Hemp contains a richer source of essential
- fatty acid oils than soy. These oils prevent heart disease and build the
- immune system.
-
- Hemp also resists UV-B light, which is a kind of sunlight that is
- blocked by the ozone layer. Soy beans do not take UV-B light very well.
- If the ozone layer were to deplete by 16%, which by some estimates is very
- possible, soy production would fall by 25-30%. We may have to grow hemp or
- starve -- and it won't be the first time that this has happened. (Hemp has
- been used to `bail out' many populations in time of famine.)
-
-
- 3a) How can hemp be used as a fuel?
-
- The pulp (hurd) of the hemp plant can be burned as fuel or processed
- into charcoal, methanol, methane, or gasoline. The process for doing this
- is called destructive distillation, or `pyrolysis.' Fuels made out of
- plants like this are called `biomass' fuels.
-
-
- b) Why is it better than petroleum?
-
- Biomass fuels are clean and virtually free from metals and sulfur, but
- more importantly, the carbon dioxide which is released when you burn biomass
- fuels did not come from under the ground, it came from the air. This way,
- the total amount of carbon dioxide in the Earth's atmosphere does not
- change. When petroleum products are burned, carbon is added to the air,
- this may contribute to global warming through the ``Greenhouse Effect,'' (a
- popular theory which says that certain gasses will act like a blanket over
- the entire Earth, preventing heat from escaping into space.)
-
-
- 4a) How can hemp be used for cloth?
-
- The fibre (bast) of the hemp plant can be woven into almost any kind
- of cloth. It is very durable. In fact, the first Levi's blue jeans were
- made out of hemp for just this reason.
-
-
- b) Why is it better than cotton?
-
- The cloth that hemp makes may be a little less soft than cotton,
- (though there also may be special kinds of hemp, or ways to grow hemp, that
- can produce a soft cloth) but it is much stronger and longer lasting. (It
- does not stretch out.)
-
- For the same reasons mentioned above, hemp is a better crop to grow
- than cotton. In the United States, the cotton crop uses half of the total
- pesticides. (Yes, you heard right, one half of the pesticides used in the
- entire U.S. are used on cotton.)
-
- Cotton is a soil damaging crop and needs a lot of fertilizer.
-
-
- 5a) How can hemp be used as a medicine?
-
- Hemp has thousands of possible uses in medicine. Just one of the 400+
- chemicals in hemp, THC, could replace up to 30% of the pharmaceutical on
- the market today.
-
- Marijuana, actually cannabis extract, was available as a medicine
- legally in this country until 1937, and was sold as a nerve tonic.
-
- Marijuana appears in almost every known book of medicine written by
- ancient scholars and wise men. It is usually ranked among the top
- medicines, or `panaceas.' It was used as a pain reliever and in childbirth
- (oxytoxant).
-
- The most well known use of marijuana today is to control nausea and
- vomiting -- one of the most important things when treating cancer or AIDS
- with chemo-therapy or AZT. Other well known uses are for glaucoma (an eye
- disease that makes you go blind), multiple sclerosis, and a wide range
- of other diseases which involve involuntary muscle spasms.
-
-
- b) What's wrong with all the prescription drugs we have?
-
- They cost money and are hard to make. In some cases, they do not work
- as well, either. Some prescription drugs which marijuana can replace have
- very bad side effects. Cannabis medicines are cheap, safe, and easy to make.
-
-
- 6a) How can hemp be used to make paper?
-
- Both the fiber (bast) and pulp (hurd) of the hemp plant can be used to
- make paper. Fiber paper was the first kind of paper, and the first batch
- of that was made out of hemp in ancient China. Fibre paper is tough,
- brittle, and a bit rough, and does not hold together as well as pulp paper,
- especially when it is wet.
-
- Pulp paper is softer than fibre paper. It is the kind of paper we use
- most today. The pulp works like glue, holding small bits of fiber
- together. Sometimes fiber is added to pulp paper to add strength.
-
- An acre of cannabis hemp will replace four acres of trees in pulp
- paper production.
-
-
- b) Why can't we just keep using trees?
-
- In order to make paper out of tree pulp, a substance called `lignin'
- must be broken down. In order to do this, the pulp must be soaked in
- powerful acid. These acids contaminate the environment. Some paper
- companies clean the acid out with zinc oxide, but zinc oxide is also
- dangerous. Paper made from trees is often whitened with chemicals which
- are alleged to be dangerous, like dioxin. Hemp pulp has no lignin and
- whitens with much less difficulty.
-
- A simpler answer to the above question is:
-
- Because we are running out! Way back in the 1930's, the USDA was
- already worried about our `tree supply.' That is why they went in search
- of plant pulp to replace wood. They found hemp, but could not use it until
- someone made a machine to strip the pulp from the fibre -- but that is
- another story -- See the next section.
-
- Today, only 4% of America's old-growth forest remains standing -- and
- there is talk about building roads into that for logging purposes!
-
-
- 7) What other uses for hemp are there?
-
- One of the newest uses of hemp is in construction materials. Hemp
- can be used in the manufacture of `press board' or `composite board.' This
- involves gluing hemp stalk fiber together under pressure to produce a
- board which is many times more elastic and durable than hardwood. Because
- hemp produces a long, tough fibre it is the perfect source for press-board.
-
- Another interesting application of hemp in industry is making plastic.
- Many plastics can be made from the high-cellulose hemp hurd. Plastics made
- this way are more environmentally safe than those made from fossil fuels.
- `Bio-plastics' are not a new idea -- way back in the 1930's Henry Ford had
- already made a whole car out of them -- but the processes for making them
- do need more research and development. Unfortunately, companies are not
- likely to do this if they have to either import the raw materials or break
- the law...
-
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- II) PROHIBITION - WHY?
-
-
- 1) How and why was hemp made illegal?
-
- As just stated, The United States Department of Agriculture first
- proposed making paper from hemp pulp in the early 1930's. Production had
- to wait, though, until somebody made a machine to separate the hemp pulp
- (hurd) from the fiber (bast) cheaply.
-
- In the meantime, a group of companies -- Dupont chemicals, Hearst
- paper and timber, and several others, developed a new way to make whiter
- paper out of trees. Just when they got all their patents and business
- dealings worked out in 1936, someone invented the hemp `decorticating'
- machine.
-
- Since hemp paper is cheaper to make, this threatened to put all of the
- tree-paper companies out of business. A huge sum of capital was tied up in
- making tree pulp paper and shipping it for sale. Most of the tree-paper
- people were very powerful and had a lot of government connections. One of
- them, William Randolph Hearst, even owned an entire newspaper chain.
-
- In 1937, they launched a country-wide campaign to put a prohibitive
- tax on hemp. This was the first `Reefer Madness Movement' (The second
- came in the 70's under Nixon.) This is when we began to call cannabis
- `marijuana.' `Marijuana' is a Mexican slang term which was relatively
- obscure until the newspapers made it a household word -- synonymous with
- evil.
-
- The Hearst newspapers played all the angles. Articles were written
- specifically to horrify the public about the dangers of marijuana. Stories
- were concocted about `axe-murderers' and sensationalistic tactics were used
- to blame heinous crimes on marijuana. The articles often took racist
- overtones, in order to capitalize on the then prevalent feelings of the
- average American towards Blacks, and Mexicans. In fact, it was this
- racism which was responsible for most of the anti-*marijuana* legislation
- previously passed in state legislatures -- Hearst and company just used
- this momentum to include hemp, in a way it is ironic that the racism
- of the American people would end up hurting them this way.
-
- 2) Wait -- why didn't we pass a better law? Why didn't somebody say
- something about hemp and stop them? How do you expect me to believe that
- no one knew marijuana was really cannabis hemp?
-
- Well, did you know all the stuff about cannabis that was in the first
- section? If so, you are a rare bird, my friend. (During Reefer Madness
- II, all mention of the word `hemp' was pretty much removed from our high-
- school curriculums, museums, history books, etc. A Smithstonian curator
- was quoted as saying ``Children don't need to know about hemp, it
- confuses them.'')
-
- By the time the 1937 Tax Act (which proposed to levy a prohibitive tax
- on the sale of small quantities of marijuana) reached Congress, the country
- was in an uproar over `that killer weed with roots in hell, marijuana.'
- The average American citizen was totally unaware that marijuana and
- cannabis hemp were the same plant (most of them didn't know where their
- clothes used to come from, anyway, because synthetic fabrics had just
- become popular.) To make matters worse, the word `hemp' was often wrongly
- used to refer to other natural fabrics, specifically jute.
-
- Those that did know decided to put their faith in other, newer crops
- and technology. This was before anyone could see how ecologically
- devastating these crops and technologies would become. Senators were
- inundated with mail from parents groups and organized grass roots lobbying.
- To them it was a simple issue of obeying the will of the people -- or not
- getting re-elected!
-
- This is not to say that no one protested, just that they were a small
- voice in the din of Reefer Madness. Numerous industries sent
- representatives to protest the usefulness of hemp. One of the loudest
- protesters, though, was the American Medical Association, which could not
- believe that the Congress would try to ban a useful medicine like cannabis,
- and was angered that they had not been told that the `two' plants,
- marijuana and cannabis, were one in the same when they were asked for
- endorsement.
-
- [You can read all of this in the Congressional records.]
-
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- The next obvious question is -- why is it STILL illegal? But we will delay
- answering this until later.
-
- Let us first take a look at some of the most common questions which we have
- today about marijuana use -- mainly, is it safe?
- What about all those scary statistics? What would legalization be like?
-
- Many of these questions come from anti-legalization arguments about why
- marijuana should be kept illegal. You will see that many of the `reasons'
- such groups give are actually just left-over hysteria from the Reefer
- Madness movements, with no basis in fact.
-
- [For proof that these arguments are still used by prohibitionists, see
- the 1988 U.S. Customs Dept. pamphlet ``Marijuana -- the Gateway Drug.'']
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- III) DOESN'T IT?, DOES IT?, HOW WOULD?
-
-
- 1a) Doesn't Marijuana cause brain damage?
-
- The short answer: No.
-
- The long answer: The reason why you ask this is because you probably
- heard or read somewhere that marijuana damages brain cells, or makes you
- stupid. These claims are untrue.
-
- The first one -- marijuana kills brain cells -- is based on research
- done during the second Reefer Madness Movement. A study attempted to show
- that marijuana smoking damaged brain structures in monkeys. However, the
- study was poorly performed and it was severely criticized by a medical
- review board. Studies done afterwards failed to show any brain damage.
-
- But this was Reefer Madness II, and the prohibitionists were looking
- for anything to keep the marijuana legalization movement in check, so this
- study was widely used in anti-marijuana propaganda, until it was recanted
- later.
-
- (To this day, the anti-drug groups will sometimes slip up and use
- it -- In fact, America's most popular drug `education' program, Drug Abuse
- Resistance Education uses it. The D.A.R.E. officer's training manual
- contains a fact sheet from the National Institute on Drug Abuse which
- says that marijuana ``can impair memory perception & judgement by destroying
- brain cells.'' When police and teachers read this and believe it, our job
- gets really tough, since it takes a long time to explain to children how
- Ms. Jones and Officer Bob were wrong.)
-
- The truth is, no study has ever demonstrated cellular damage,
- stupidity, mental impairment, or insanity brought on specifically by
- marijuana use -- even heavy marijuana use. This is not to say that it
- cannot be abused, however.
-
- b) If it doesn't kill brain cells, how does it get you `high'?
-
- Killing brain cells is not a pre-requisite for getting `high.'
- Marijuana contains a chemical which substitutes for a natural brain
- chemical, with a few differences. This chemical touches special `buttons'
- on brain cells called `receptors.' Essentially, marijuana `tickles' brain
- cells. The legal drug alcohol also tickles brain cells, but it will
- damage and kill them by producing toxins (poisons) and sometimes mini-seizures.
-
-
- 2) Isn't smoking marijuana worse for you than smoking cigarettes?
-
- There are many reasons why it is not. The first is that marijuana
- smokers generally don't chain smoke, and so they smoke less. (Marijuana is
- not physically addictive.)
-
- The second is that tobacco contains nicotine, and marijuana doesn't.
- Nicotine hardens the arteries and is responsible for much of the heart
- disease caused by tobacco.
-
- The third is that marijuana contains THC. THC is a bronchial dilator,
- which means it works like a Hall's cough drop and opens up your lungs,
- which aids clearance of smoke and dirt. Nicotine does just the opposite;
- it makes your lungs bunch up and makes it harder to cough anything up.
-
- The fourth is that there are benefits from marijuana (besides
- bronchial dilation) that you don't get from tobacco. Mainly, marijuana
- makes you relax, which improves your health and well-being.
-
- The fifth is that scientists do not really know what it is that causes
- malignant lung cancer in tobacco. Some think it may be a substance known
- as Lead 210. Of course, there are many other theories as to what does
- cause cancer, but if this is true, it is easy to see why NO CASE OF LUNG
- CANCER RESULTING FROM MARIJUANA USE ALONE HAS EVER BEEN DOCUMENTED, because
- tobacco contains much more of this substance than marijuana.
-
- You may have heard that `one joint is equal to 10 cigarettes' This is
- based on studies which measured the tar content of cannabis and tobacco
- leaves. Marijuana smokers prefer the bud, though, which is much cleaner.
-
-
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- A NOTE: This isn't to say that smoking marijuana is not bad for your lungs,
- but consider for a moment this list of things that make marijuana less
- dangerous to use:
-
- o filters: like cigarette filters
-
- o pipes (or bowls): burn cleaner than a `joint'
-
- o water pipes: bubble the smoke through water to `wash' it
-
- o smoking bud instead of leaf: reduces the tar content and consumption
-
- o eating it instead of smoking: entirely eliminates any lung damage
-
- o extracting the THC into a drink or inhaler: also eliminates lung damage
-
- All of these things are made harder by marijuana laws. Pipes,
- especially water-pipes, are usually illegal by city or state law. Filtered
- cigarettes and inhalers would be wider used if they were mass produced,
- which is hard to arrange `underground.' People can't eat the marijuana
- because you need more to get high that way, and it isn't cheap or easy to
- get -- which is the reason why some people will stoop to smoking leaves.
-
- This may sound funny to you -- but the more legal marijuana gets,
- the safer it is. In addition to the above, legal marijuana would be
- clean and free from adulturants (other drugs added to the marijuana.) It
- would also stand less of a chance of being sprayed with pesticides or
- contaminated with dangerous fungi.
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- 3) Doesn't marijuana stay in your fatty cells and affect you for up to a
- month?
-
- THC breaks down quickly after entering your body, into inert molecules
- known as `metabolites,' which don't get you high. It is the metabolites
- that get stored in fat cells and slowly leave -- not the THC. Only trace
- levels of THC remain after several hours, not enough to affect you at all.
-
- It is the metabolites that urine tests look for, so if a person tests
- positive on a urine test, It does not mean he was `stoned' when he took the
- test -- just that he smoked within the last 30 days.
-
- Many anti-drug pamphlets say that THC gets stored in your
- fat cells and then leaks out later, acting like a `time release capsule'
- and keeping you high for months. These claims are totally untrue.
-
- 4) Is marijuana addictive?
-
- Marijuana produces no withdrawal symptoms no matter how heavy it is
- used. It is habit forming (psychologically addictive), but not
- physically addictive.
-
-
- 5) I heard that there are over 400 chemicals in marijuana... Wellllll...?
-
- True, but so what? There are also over 400 chemicals in many foods,
- [including coffee, which contains 800 chemicals and many rat carcinogens]
- and I don't see police arresting people in McDonald's, or giving Driving
- while Eating citations. Only THC is very psycho-active, a few other
- cannabinoids also have small degrees of psycho-activity. People who use
- marijuana do not get sick more, or die earlier, or lose their jobs [except
- to drug tests], or have mutant kids... so what's your point?
-
-
- 6) I forgot, does marijuana cause memory impairment?
-
- Marijuana affects short-term memory, but does not `impair' it. It
- simply makes you remember different things. This could be considered good
- or bad. Heavy marijuana smokers have been tested and were perfectly
- functional and well adjusted. They performed well on tests and seemed
- normal.
-
- For first-time smokers, this effect is exaggerated. Most experienced
- marijuana smokers will tell you that once you get used to marijuana, you
- can remember things more normally. Much of the short-term memory loss
- may be due to the distraction of being stoned, as you simply do not pay
- attention to some things. Some of the loss may be a result of direct chemical
- action on your brain. A tolerance to these effects will build up during
- long periods of use.
-
-
- 7) Marijuana impairs the immune system, increasing the susceptibility
- to AIDS.
-
- This, too, has not been proven. It is based off
- hysterical claims made on national television by former drug czar Carlton
- Turner, for which he presented no valid research.
-
-
- 8) Hey, don't you know that marijuana drops testosterone levels in
- teenage boys causing [various physical and developmental problems]?
-
- Marijuana does not turn young healthy boys into lanky, girlish looking
- wimps, no. This scare tactic (call it homo-phobic if you will) was a common
- device used in early anti-drug literature. It attempts to scare boys away
- from marijuana by telling them, essentially, that it will turn them into a
- girl.
-
- The studies which are cited, where they exist, are mostly
- faulty or misinterpreted. This is not to say that marijuana use does not
- affect childhood development at all, just that the effects are not as
- drastic as some people would like them to sound. In fact they are pretty
- much unknown.
-
-
- 9) Doesn't heavy marijuana use lower the sperm count in males?
-
- Not by much, (if at all) and this can be a good thing. It does not make
- you impotent or sterile. (If it did -- there would be no Rastafarae or Zion
- Coptic Christians left!) Give those testicles a rest, already!
-
-
- 10) I heard marijuana use by teenage girls may impair hormone production,
- menstrual cycles, and fertility. Is this true?
-
- Also unproven and unfounded, but there is no data available to tell
- either way, (and it won't be coming from the U.S. -- current U.S. laws
- prohibit research on women, even if marijuana studies could get funding --
- which they cannot, generally.)
-
- This is the female analog to the boy's ``It'll turn you into a sissy''
- tactic. As far as anyone knows, It is only a scare tactic.
-
-
- 11) Don't children born to pot-smoking mothers suffer from ``Fetal
- Marijuana Syndrome?''
-
- Studies conducted in Jamaica show that heavy marijuana use can cause
- the baby to develop differently -- it weighs more, cries less, and seems
- more curious and explorative, -- otherwise they show no difference. All of
- these things are good. But those who aren't so sure about this will be
- relieved to know that this only happens to children of heavy users.
-
- THC does cross the barrier to the fetus, but does not cause any
- horrible diseases or malformations like Fetal Alcohol Syndrome. Also,
- chronic abuse of marijuana may cause problems. Whether the studies done
- in Jamaica actually mean anything to mothers in the U.S. or other developed
- countries is not known.
-
-
- 12) Don't people die from smoking pot?
-
- Never, not a one. [Well, maybe one, if you stretch it -- there is an
- account of an African Tribesman who did Dagga (smoked marijuana, as
- punishment) and he hit himself on the head too hard with a wooden club.]
-
- In contrast, many legal drugs cause tens to thousands of deaths per
- year, foremost among them alcohol, nicotine, valium, aspirin, and caffiene.
-
- 13) Isn't marijuana a gateway drug? Doesn't it lead to use of harder
- drugs?
-
- This is totally untrue. (In fact, research may be breaking soon that
- shows that marijuana aids in kicking crack habits.) If you do not believe
- so, do the math. There are 40 million people in this country (U.S.) who
- have smoked marijuana for a period of their lives -- why aren't there 40
- million heroin users, then? In Amsterdam, both marijuana use and heroin
- use went *down* after marijuana was decriminalized -- even though there
- was a short rise in marijuana use right after decriminalization.
-
- The `gateway' or `stepping stone' hypothesis of drug use is no longer
- generally accepted by the medical community. On sociological grounds, the
- a gateway theory has been argued which claims that marijuana is the source
- of the drug subculture and leads to other drugs through that culture. This
- is untrue -- marijuana does not create the drug subculture, the drug
- subculture uses marijuana.
-
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- This brings up another example of how marijuana legalization could actually
- reduce the use of illicit drugs. Even though there is no magical `stepping
- stone' effect, people who choose to buy marijuana often buy from dealers
- who deal in many different illegal drugs. This means that they have access
- to illegal drugs, and might decide to try them out. If marijuana were
- legal, the drug markets would be separated, and less people would start
- using illegal drugs.
-
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- 14) Can't marijuana cause psychoses in some people?
-
- Marijuana does not `cause' psychosis. Psychotic people can smoke
- marijuana and have an episode, but there is not a consensus that marijuana
- actually initiates or increases these episodes. Of course, if a psychotic
- is given marijuana for the first time or without his knowledge, they might
- get scared and `freak.'
-
-
- 15) Does marijuana impairment cause more driving accidents?
-
- Not really. The marijuana using public has the same or lower rate of
- automobile accidents as the general public. Studies of marijuana smoking
- while driving showed that it does affect reaction time, but not nearly as
- much as alcohol. Also, those who drive `stoned' have been shown to be less
- foolish on the road (they demonstrate `increased risk aversion'.)
-
- As funny as it may seem, you may be safer driving `stoned', as long as
- you aren't `totally blasted' and seeing things -- but few people want to
- drive in this state of mind, anyway. Still, many people have reported
- making mistakes while driving because they were stoned.
-
-
- 16) Is it true that marijuana makes you lazy and unmotivated?
-
- No, it doesn't -- ask the U.S. Army. They did a study and showed no
- effect. If this were true, why would many Eastern cultures, and Jamaicans,
- use marijuana as a work motivator (to help them work)?
-
-
- 17) I don't want children (minors) to be able to smoke marijuana. How
- can I stop this?
-
- Legalize it.
-
- They can smoke it now -- it is impossible to control. There would be
- less marijuana being sold in schools, playgrounds, and street corners,
- though, if it was sold legally through pharmacies -- because the dealers
- would not be able to compete with the prices.
-
- Consider, also, that children have a natural urge to do things that
- they aren't supposed to. It is called curiosity. By making such a fuss
- over marijuana, you make it interesting. This is the `forbidden fruit'
- factor.
-
-
- 18) Won't children be able to steal marijuana plants that people are
- growing?
-
- Well, if you are worried about them stealing the hemp plants from the
- paper-pulp farm down the road, you should know that the commercial grades
- of hemp do not contain much THC (the stuff that gets you high.) If they
- were to smoke it, they would probably just get a headache. Otherwise,
- it should be the responsibility of the grower to take measures to prevent
- this. Most ``home-grown'' is cultivated indoors anyway.
-
-
- 19) Is urine testing for marijuana use as a terms of employment a good
- idea?
-
- No! Some of your most brilliant, hard working, and reliable employees
- are marijuana users. When you drug test, you put all marijuana users in
- the same place as the abusers -- the unemployment line. Drug testing is
- bad for business. (Not to mention it is an invasion of privacy.)
-
- If a worker has a drug problem, you can tell by testing how well he
- does his job. Firing all the drug users who work for you will hurt your
- business, costs money, and will get people very mad at you.
-
- Drug testing allows an employer to govern the actions of an employee
- in his off time -- even when these actions do not effect his job
- performance. Asking employees to urinate in a plastic cup every month is
- not a good way to make them feel like part of the business, or make
- friends, either.
-
-
- 20) I forgot, does marijuana cause short-term memory impairment?
-
- Go away.
-
- 21) But ... isn't today's marijuana much more potent than it was
- in the Sixties? (Or, more often .... Marijuana is n times more powerful
- than it was in the Sixties!)
-
- GOOD! Actually, this is not true, but if it were, it would
- mean that marijuana was actually safer to smoke. People who use this
- statistic just plain do not know what they are talking about. Sometimes
- they will even claim that marijuana is now twenty to thirty times stronger,
- which is physically impossible. The truth is, marijuana has not really
- changed potency all that much, if at all.
-
- Even so, the point is moot because marijuana smokers engage in
- something called `auto-titration.' This basically means smoking until
- they are satisfied and then stopping, so it does not really matter
- if the marijuana is more potent because they will smoke less of it.
- Since being `too stoned' is a rather unpleasant experience, smokers
- quickly learn to take their time and go slowly when they smoke.
-
-
- 22) Shouldn't we just lock them (users) all up?
-
- How are you going to pay for it? Already, ten percent of the people
- in this country (U.S) are in custody. Murderers and rapists are being paroled
- right now to make room for a few more `deadheads' in prison. The United
- States leads the world in imprisonment -- at any one time, 425 people out
- of every 100,000 are behind bars.
-
- Once a person gets put in jail, he becomes angry with the world. By
- locking up drug users, you are digging yourself a very big trench to fall in --
- is it worth it?
-
- Besides - lots of these people don't deserve to be in jail. Why
- should they serve time just because they like to get `high?' Especially
- when someone can drink alcohol without being arrested... what kind of law
- is that?
-
- You have to think about what kind of a world you are making for yourself
- before you act. How are the police of the future going to treat the people?
- How far are you willing to let the government go to get the drug users? How
- many of your own rights will you sacrifice by trying to jail drug users?
-
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- IV) Why is it STILL illegal?:
-
- The official answer: Because you shouldn't use it. You can't use it
- because it is illegal, and it is illegal so you can't use it. You should
- not use it. It is illegal. It is illegal so you should not use it. :-\
-
- The manic-depressive answer: It'll never happen. People are too
- unorganized/stupid/disempowered. It's just futility. Try, but don't
- expect to get anywhere. I won't get my hopes up.
-
- The paranoid-schizophrenic answer: Don't you SEE?!?!? The guys at
- the top have it SEWN!! They own everything. They'll never let it happen.
- I shouldn't even be talking to you, but let me give you some advice!!
- listen... you shouldn't mess with THEM, THEY know everything. THEY are
- practically psychic, see? And the only way to get it to happen is to
- become one of THEM. You'd better watch it, or THEY will come and take you
- away -- THEY do that, you know. It's all a CONSPIRACY!!!
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- ANOTHER SIDE-NOTE: Our fuzzy-headed friend here may be over-reacting a bit,
- but there is some basis to his fears. Many anti-drug operations receive
- a lot of support from today's producers of legal drugs. For example, I am
- sure most of you have seen television advertisements warning you not to do
- drugs, produced by the Partnership for a Drug Free America. These are some
- of the companies who pay for those commercials by donating money to the
- PDFA:
-
- From 1988 to 1991, pharmaceutical companies and their beneficiaries
- contributed as follows:
- J. Seward Johnson, Sr., Charitable Trusts ($1,100,000)
- Du Pont ($150,000)
- Proctor & Gamble Fund ($120,000)
- Bristol-Myers Squibb Foundation ($110,000)
- Johnson & Johnson ($110,000)
- SmithKline Beecham ($100,000)
- Merck Foundation ($75,000)
- Hoffman-La Roche ($50,000)
-
- (doesn't include donations under $90,000)
-
- Tobacco and Alcohol companies:
-
- donations from the tobacco and alcohol kings: The Partnership has
- Phillip Morris ($150,000)
- Anheuser-Busch ($150,000)
- RJR Reynolds ($150,000)
- American Brands (Jim Beam, Lucky Strike). ($100,000)
-
- Also, doesn't it seem odd that the advertisements produced by the
- PDFA rarely, if ever, warn youngsters about the very dangerous *legal* drugs,
- like sniffing glue or paint thinner, smoking tobacco, and drinking alcohol?
- Perhaps there is a little more to this `War on Drugs' than meets the eye.
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- The neurotic answer: Marijuana? Eeek! Don't you know that stuff is
- dangerous? People don't make laws for no good reason, you know! Where did
- you hear about marijuana? Wait! Don't tell me, I don't want to know. If
- anybody even knew you thought it should be legal -- well -- they'd never
- talk to you again! Don't you know that marijuana this... marijuana that...
- ... ... ...
-
-
-
- THE REAL ANSWER: Marijuana is still illegal because enough people
- have not yet stood up together and said:
-
-
- `` THIS IS STUPID!!
-
-
- I WANT CANNABIS HEMP LEGAL!!!
-
-
- FOR PRODUCTS;
-
-
- FOR MEDICINE;
-
-
- FOR FOOD;
-
-
- FOR FUN;
-
-
- FOR GOODNESS'S SAKE! ISN'T THAT WHAT LIFE'S ALL ABOUT ? ''
-
- Without large-scale grass roots support, marijuana will never be
- legal. Every person that stands up for marijuana/hemp legalization makes
- us that much stronger, and our voices that much louder. Believe me, we
- appreciate all the support we get. Almost as importantly, it makes it that
- much harder for people to say ``that's a stupid idea'' or ``nobody really
- believes that.''
- If you aren't convinced yet, I encourage you to learn more about the
- issues. Try the sources listed at the end.
- If you're with us, let us know! Let everybody know, unless it will
- get you canned or arrested, but most importantly, keep an eye on what's
- going on, and try to lend a hand when you can. Also, know your stuff, so
- if you have to, you can convince a friend or loved one that *you* are not
- nuts -- the rest of the world is.
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- V) RESOURCES - (ON-LINE)
-
- o The University of Massachusetts Cannabis Reform Coalition maintains
- an on-line library which you can access via electronic mail. For
- more information, reply to this posting. In the subject of your
- reply, put the following pattern: {{{readme}}}. Be careful to
- match this pattern exactly. The e-mail address of the library
- is verdant@twain.ucs.umass.edu.
-
- o Most of the files in the on-line library are available by anonymous
- ftp, at the following sites:
-
- SITE: DIRECTORY: MAINTAINER:
- ftp.hmc.edu /pub/drugs cklausme@jarthur.claremont.edu
- ftp.u.washington.edu /public/alt.drugs lamontg@u.washington.edu
- flubber.cs.umd.edu /other/tms/drug.politics ?
- wiretap.spies.com /Library/Fringe/Pharm ?
- nic.funet.fi /pub/sci/neural/alt.drugs ?
- potemkin.cs.pds.edu /pub/politics/drugs ?
- hemp.uwec.edu /drugs DRUMM@CNSVAX.UWEC.EDU
-
- NOTE: This list was put together by cklausme@jarthur.claremont.edu for
- research into drug subjects. Some of these sights have little to do
- with hemp legalization. When I get the time, I will `customize' this
- list. Anyone who wants to help, my address is verdant@student.umass.edu
-
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- VI) Other Resources (VERY INCOMPLETE)
-
-
- (pro-hemp books)
-
- Jack Frazier, ``The Marijuana Farmers'' Solar Age Press, New
- Orleans, 1972
-
- Jack Herer, ``The Emperor Wears No Clothes'' Queen of Clubs/HEMP
- Publishing, 1992
- Subtitled: The Authoritative Historical Record of the Cannabis Plant,
- Marijuana Prohibition, & How Hemp Can Still Save the World.
- Comment: A compendium of stories, opinions, and documents about
- America's great drug hypocrisy.
-
- Chris Conrad, Hemp, Life-Line to the Future, 312 pp.
- Comment: Very readable. Convincingly portrays hemp as a viable
- economic alternative for a sustainable future.
-
- Cohen & Stillman, ``Therapeutic Potential of Marijuana'', Plenum
- Press, NY, 1976. (nutrition and medical use)
-
- *** Journal Articles of General Interest ***
-
- ``Marijuana Laws: A Need for Reform'' by Roger Allan Glasgow; Arkansas
- Law Review Vol 22 Iss. 340 pp.359-375
-
-
- *** Government commissions recommending legalization ***
-
- Mayor LaGuardia's Committee on Marijuana (New York) Report issued 1944.
- (Initiated 1938 -- an extensive study of marijuana)
-
-
-
- SOURCES (by question number)
-
- --------------------------------------------------------
- I)
- 1a) [hemp]
-
- ``Hemp.'' by Lyster H. Dewey in the Yearbook of the United States Department
- of Agriculture 1913 pp.283-346
-
- b) [cannabis]
-
- (cites pending)
-
- c) [origin of the word marijuana]
-
- (cites pending)
-
- 2a) [hemp seed/seed oil/leaves as food]
-
- [protein content]
-
- St.a Angelo, A.J., E.J. Conkerton, J.M. Dechary, and A.M. Altschul 1966,
- Biochimica et Biophysica Acta, vol. 121, pp. 181;
-
- St. Angelo, A.J., L.y. Yatsu and A. M. Altschul 1968, Archives of
- Biochemistry and Biophysics, vol. 124, pp.199-205
-
- Stockwell, D.M., J.M. Dechary, and A.M. Altschul, 1964, Biochimica Biophysica
- Axta, vol.82, pp.221
-
- (these three above references indirect via ``the Emperor Wears no Clothes''
- I haven't obtained copies of the articles yet.)
-
- [essential fatty acid oils]
-
- ``Hemp-Seed Oil Compared with Other Common Vegetable Oils'' by
- Gerald X. Diamond in Washington Citizens for Drug Policy Reform
- Cannabis Hemp Information Kit.
-
- ``Therapeutic Hemp Oil'' by Andrew Weil, M.D. in Natural Health March/April
- 1993 (1992?)
-
- b) [agricultural benefits of hemp]
-
- ``Hemp.'' by Lyster H. Dewey as cited in I)1a)
-
- c) [hemp vs. soy]
-
- (protein production)
-
- ``Hemp.'' by Lyster H. Dewey as cited in I)1a)
- and the studies by Altschul as cited in I)2a)
-
- (resistance to UV-B sunlight)
-
- ``UV-B Effects on Terrestrial Plants'' by Manfred Tevini and Alan H.
- Teremura in Photochemistry and Photobiology Vol. 50, No. 4, pp.479-487
- 1989
-
- 3a) [hemp based fuels]
-
- b) [fossil fuels]
-
- 4a) [hemp clothing/fabrics]
-
- ``Hemp, Flax, Jute, Ramie, Kenaf and Other Industrial Fibers -- a
- Comparison of Properties and Applications'' by Gerald X. Diamond in
- Washington Citizens for Drug Policy Reform Cannabis Hemp Information
- Kit.
-
- b) [cotton]
-
- (cites pending)
-
- 5a) [marijuana as medicine]
-
- ``In the Matter of Marijuana Rescheduling Petition -- Opinion and Recommended
- Ruling, Findings of Fact, Conclusions of Law and Decision of Administrative
- Law Judge Francis L. Young'' USDJ DEA Dated Sept 6th Docket No. 86-22
-
- (other cites pending)
-
- b) [legal pharmeceuticals]
-
- (cites pending)
-
- 6) [hemp paper]
-
- United States Department of Agriculture Bulletin #404
-
- II)
- 1) [hemp/marijuana prohibition -- history]
-
- ``The History of Marijuana in the United States'' by Lester Grinspoon in
- his book ``Marijuana Reconsidered'' (pub. data to follow)
-
- ``The Emperor Wears No Clothes'' by Jack Herer; Hemp/Queen of Clubs
- publishing 1989-1992 ISBN 1-878125-00-1
-
- ``The Puzzle of the Social Origins of the Marijuana Tax Act of 1937'' by
- John F. Galliher and Allynn Walker; Social problems 1977, vol. 24 p367-376
-
- (racism)
-
- ``Mexicans and Marijuana'' by John Helmer in his book ``Drugs and Minority
- Oppression'' (pub. data to follow)
-
- 2) [misinformation/lack of information on hemp]
-
- ``The Emperor Wears No Clothes'' by Jack Herer; Hemp/Queen of Clubs
- publishing 1989-1992 ISBN 1-878125-00-1
-
- ``Hemp.'' by Lyster H. Dewey as cited in I)1a)
-
- III)
- 1) [marijuana and brain damage]
-
- ``The Chronic Cerebral Effects of Cannabis Use. I) Methodological
- Issues and Neurological Findings II) Psychological Findings and
- Conclusions'' by Renee C. Wert, Ph.D. and Michael L. Raulin, Ph.D.
- in The International Journal of the Addictions 1986, Vol 21(6),
- pp.605-628 (Part I) and pp.629-642 (Part II)
-
-
- (the following are the studies which were found to be flawed)
-
- Harper, J.W., Heath, R.G., and Myers, W.A. Effects of
- cannabis sativa on ultrastructure of the synapse in
- monkey brain. J. Neurosci. Res. 3:87-93. 1977.
- Heath, R.G., Fitzjarrell, A.T., Garey, R.E., and Myers, W.A.
- Chronic marihuana smoking: Its effects on function and
- structure of the primate brain. In Nahas, G.G. and
- Paton, W.D.M. (eds) Marihuana: Biological Effects.
- Analysis, Metabolism, Cullarlar Responses, Reproduction
- and Brain. Pergamon Press: Oxford. 1979.
- Heath, R.G., Fitzjarrell, A.T., Fontana, C.J., and Garey,
- R.E. Cannabis sativa: Effects on brain function and
- ultrastructure in Rhesus monkeys. Biological Psychiatry.
- 15:657-690. 1980.
-
- (D.A.R.E. says pot kills brain cells)
-
- D.A.R.E. Officers Training Manual K-12, Section T page 5
-
- 1b) [brain cells death and getting `high']
-
- (marijuana psycho-action / mechanism)
-
- (alcohol brain damage -- cites pending)
-
- 2) [marijuana and tobacco, lungs]
-
- ``Subacute Effects of Heavy Marijuana Smoking on Pulmonary Function
- In Healthy Men'' Donald P. Tashkin, M.D., Bertrand J. Shapiro, M.D.,
- Y. Enoch Lee, B.S. and Charles E. Harper in the New England Journal
- of Medicine Jan 15, 1978; Vol. 294, No. 3 pp.125-129
-
- (the radioactive tobacco theory)
-
- Correspondence section of the New England Journal of Medicine, Feb.
- 11, 1982 Vol 306 No. 6 and July 29th, 1982 Vol 307 No. 5
-
- 3) [duration of marijuana ``high'']
-
- (cites pending)
-
- 4) [addictiveness of marijuana]
-
- (cites pending)
-
- 5) [over 400 chemicals in marijuana]
-
- (800 different chemicals in coffee)
-
- Ames, B.N., Gold, L.S. Too many rodent carcinogens:
- Mitogenesis increases mutagenesis. Science. Vol 149.
- Pg. 971. 1990.
-
- 6) [marijuana and short term memory]
-
- (cites pending)
-
- 7) [marijuana and the immune system]
-
- ``Marijuana and Immunity'' by Leo E. Hollister M.D.; Journal of Psycho-Active
- Drugs Vol 24(2), Apr-Jun 1992 pp159-164
-
- 8) [marijuana and adolescent males]
-
- (cites pending)
-
- 9) [marijuana and sperm count]
-
- (cites pending)
-
- 10) [marijuana and adolescent females]
-
- (cites pending)
-
- 11) [Fetal Marijuana Syndrome (sic)]
-
- Research of Melanie Dreher (cites pending)
-
- 12) [marijuana lethality (sic)]
-
- (cites pending)
-
- 13) [the gateway theory]
-
- (cites pending)
-
- 14) [psychotic reactions to marijuana]
-
- (cites pending)
-
- 15) [marijuana and automobile accidents]
-
- (cites pending)
-
- 16) [amotivational syndrome]
-
- ``Behavioral and Biological Concomitants of Chronic Marijuana
- Use'' Dr. Jack H. Mendelson, 1974. This study was conducted by
- the United States Army and never released, until the National
- Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws found it.
-
- ``Commission on Marijuana and Drug Abuse -- Final Report'' 1973
- Washington.
-
- ( use of marijuana and other drugs in a positive role in work )
-
- ``Working Men and Ganja: Marijuana Use in Rural Jamaica.''
- Dreher, M.C. (Now Dean of Nursing at UMASS) 1982 Philadelphia
- Institute for the Study of Human Issues.
-
- ``American Opiophobia: Customary Underutilization of Opioid
- Analgesics.'' C.S. Hill, Jr. and W.S Fields; Advances in Pain
- Research and Therapy, vol. 2 pp. 163-173
-
- ``The working addict'' Caplovitz, D. 1976, White Plains, NY Sharpe
-
- 17) [keeping kids off pot]
-
- (cites pending)
-
- 18) [industrial hemp potency]
-
- (cites pending)
-
- 19) [urinalysis]
- 20) Go away.
- 21) [marijuana potency]
-
- ``Cannabis 1988 Old Drug, New Dangers The Potency Question'' by Tod
- H. Mikuriya, M.D. and Michael R. Aldrich, Ph.D. in the Journal of
- Psycho-Active Drugs Vol.20(1), Jan-Mar 1988 pp.47-55
-
- 22) [putting users in jail -- bad, bad, bad]
-
- (civil liberties issues)
-
- ``The Pathology of the War on Drugs: The Assault on Justice and
- Civil Liberties'' by Steven Wisotsky in Beyond the War on Drugs (1990)
- Chapter 7.
-
- ``Waste heat and Garbage: The legalization of Warrantless Infrared
- Searches'' by Lisa J. Steele in Criminal Law Bulletin, Jan-Feb 1993 pp.19-39
-
- ``Domestic Drug Interdiction Operations: Finding The Balance'' by Sandra
- Guerra in the Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology Vol 82, No. 4
- 1992 pp.1109-1161
-
- (articles on the military in the Drug War)
-
- ``Police Action'' by David C. Morrison in National Security 2/1/92
- pp.267-270
-
- ``The Militarization of the Drug War in Mexico'' by Kate Doyle in
- Current History February 1993 pp.83-89
-
- ``The Newest Trojan Horse'' by Catherine Cornez in World Press Review
- June 1992 pp.17-18
-
- ``The Golden Lie'' by Diana Reynolds in the Humanist Sept./Oct. 1990
- pp.10-49
-
- (number of marijuana smokers in the U.S.)
-
- (cites pending)
-
- --
- The University of Massachusetts at Amherst | _________,^-.
- Cannabis Reform Coalition ( | ) ,>
- S.A.O. Box #2 \|/ {
- 415 Student Union Building `-^-' ? )
- UMASS, Amherst MA 01003 verdant@titan.ucs.umass.edu |____________ `--~ ;
- \_,-__/
- * To find out about our on-line library, mail me a message with the
- * pattern "{{{readme}}}" contained IN THE SUBJECT LINE.
- * You will be mailed instructions; your message will be otherwise ignored
-
-
-
-