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Site Map and Archive of hard hitting commentary that examines the root causes of issues and offers no nonsense solutions along with a good dose of common sense. In BLACK & WHITE - ©BBSNews 2001-2003.
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In BLACK & WHITE

Michael Hess

BBSNews 2003

Michael Hess, Editor BBSNews. Photo by BBSNews ©2002


Assessing The Marijuana "Gateway" Theory

"The truth is that marijuana is a gateway drug for many people. Not every person that uses marijuana will go on to use other drugs, but the overwhelming majority of people using other dangerous drugs - about 99% - began by smoking "a little weed." People who used marijuana are 8 times more likely to have used cocaine, 15 times more likely to have used heroin, and 5 times more likely to develop a need for treatment of abuse or dependance on ANY drug." [Please see sidebar.]

In November 2002, a letter was published in the National District Attorneys Association by Scott Burns, Deputy Director for State and Local Affairs, Office of National Drug Control Policy. There are included seven dubious "truths" that more closely resemble classic "reefer madness" than any actual facts or "truth." They are reprinted in this sidebar and BBSNews is providing answers to these horrible mis-representations of the real facts, with a separate article for each one.

Scott Burns, Deputy Director for State and Local Affairs, Office of National Drug Control Policy.

"The truth is that marijuana is not harmless. As a factor in emergency room visits, marijuana has risen 176% since 1994, and now surpasses heroin. Smoking marijuana leads to changes in the brain similar to those caused by the use of cocaine and heroin, and affects alertness, concentration, perception, coordination, and reaction time. One recent study involving a roadside check of reckless drivers (not impaired by alcohol) showed that 45% tested positive for marijuana."


"The truth is that marijuana is addictive. Average THC levels rose from less than 1% in the late 1970s to more than 7% in 2001, and sinsemilla potency increased from 6% to 13%, and now reaches as high as 33%. Marijuana users have an addiction rate of about 10%, and of the 5.6 million drug users who are suffering from illegal drug dependence or abuse, 62% are dependent on or are abusing marijuana."


"The truth is that marijuana and violence are linked. Research shows a link between frequent marijuana use and increased violent behavior, and youth who use marijuana weekly are nearly four times more likely than non-users to engage in violence."


"The truth is that we aren't imprisoning individuals for just "smoking a joint." Overwhelmingly, we treat drug users, and especially marijuana users. Nationwide, the percentage of those in prison for marijuana possession as their most serious offense is less than half of one percent (0.46%), and those generally involved exceptional circumstances."

To read the actual truth about how many people are in prison and arrested each year for marijuana please click here. By Derek Snider.


"The truth is that marijuana is a gateway drug for many people. Not every person that uses marijuana will go on to use other drugs, but the overwhelming majority of people using other dangerous drugs - about 99% - began by smoking "a little weed." People who used marijuana are 8 times more likely to have used cocaine, 15 times more likely to have used heroin, and 5 times more likely to develop a need for treatment of abuse or dependance on ANY drug."

To read the actual truth about the entirely dis-credited "gateway theory" please click here. By Brian Bennett.


"The truth is that marijuana legalization would be a nightmare in America. After Dutch coffee shops started selling marijuana in small quantities, use of the drug nearly tripled (from 15% to 44%) among 18-20 year olds between 1984 and 1996. While our nation's cocaine consumption has decreased by 80% over the last 15 years, Europe's has increased...and the Dutch government has started to reconsider its policies."

To read the actual truth about Dutch Drug Policy from someone who is there and on the ground please click here. By Eric Johnson.


"The truth is that marijuana is not a medicine, and no credible research suggests that it is. There is a protocol to allow some drugs - like cocaine and methamphetamine - to be prescribed in limited cases. Our medical system is the best in the world, and it relies on proven scientific research, not opinions or anecdotes. The primary medical "benefit" of the numerous chemicals in marijuana are increased risk of cancer, lung damage, and poor pregnancy outcomes."

To read the actual truth about the entirely dis-credited notion that marijuana is not a medicine please click here. By Michael Hess.


Excerpted from: http://www.ndaa-apri.org/pdf/alsobrooks_letter_nov_1_2002.pdf

From the BBSNews Series: A Material Breach of Marijuana Facts

BBSNews - 2003-01-15 -- By Brian C. Bennett, January 15th, 2003 -- The Office of National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP) tells us that "marijuana users are 8 times more likely to have used cocaine, 15 times more likely to have used heroin, and 5 times more likely to develop a need for treatment of abuse or dependence on ANY drug." These statistics, according to the ONDCP, prove that marijuana is a gateway to the use of other drugs. Before we give in to the hysteria and hand wringing though, let's have a look at what's really going on.

The National Household Survey on Drug Abuse (NHSDA) is an annual survey produced under the auspices of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, and serves as the basis for many of the claims made by ONDCP concerning drug use in America.

If we take the time to look at the data from this survey, however, we can quickly see that ONDCP is, shall we say, grossly distorting and exaggerating the "threat" posed to our society by marijuana use.

In order to determine the likelihood that using one drug will lead to the use of another, it would be helpful to have some idea of exactly how many people have used various drugs. If we have those numbers we can better make comparisons and determinations about patterns of drug use. Fortunately, the NHSDA gives us exactly the data we need.

One measure of drug use contained in the NHSDA is the total number of first time drug users for every year from 1965 to the present for each substance commonly used for self intoxication. If there is a drug conduit leading from one drug to the next "more dangerous" one, there should be some pattern evident in these numbers.First Time Drug Users 1965-1999. Brian Bennett.

Indeed there is a pattern: most people who have used marijuana will never move on to using other "more dangerous" drugs. The total number of first time users shown in the graph to the left clearly shows that the more "dangerous" a drug is, the less likely it is that someone will try it. While ONDCP would like us to buy into their gateway theory, three decades of data clearly show there is no such thing.

So then, what is really going on, and how can we best understand the relationship between smoking marijuana and the use of other drugs? Perhaps the best analogy would be a comparison to some other class of risky behavior, say flying.

Most people are not afraid to fly and the view the risk of doing so as minimal. Therefore, many millions of people have flown in airplanes. Similarly, most people regard alcohol as not too dangerous, thus a large number have tried it.

Some people think that flying in an airplane is safe enough, but they need to be further stimulated by actually flying airplanes. Use of marijuana is analogous -- since it is illegal, it is more "dangerous" so fewer people will try it than will try alcohol.

A smaller number of people will be attracted to the danger presented by leaping from the airplane with a parachute. This is behavior that many people will regard as "fairly dangerous," and analogous to use of cocaine or hallucinogens.

Lastly, a very very small number of people may find it necessary to stimulate themselves further by first throwing a parachute from an airplane and then leaping after it. Such behavior is clearly beyond the bounds of comfort for all but the most foolhardy of risk takers. Such is the case among drug users when it comes to trying heroin.

Using the logic driving ONDCP's "gateway theory," we may declare that: people who fly airplanes are 10 times as likely to have ridden in an airplane first, and those who leap from airplanes are 100,000 times as likely to have done so.

Does flying in an airplane constitute a gateway to leaping from them? Certainly one has to have been inside an airplane before one can leap from it, but obviously a smaller percentage of those who ride inside airplanes are compelled to leap from them, and hardly any of them feel compelled to walk about on the outside of them or chuck a parachute out then jump after it.

What is actually going on is something much simpler: people have different toleration of, and requirements for, taking risks. Those who will engage in a high risk behavior are naturally more likely to engage in lower risk behaviors. So, as sure as the ONDCP declares, "99 percent of those who use other drugs will have begun by smoking a little weed." Just as 99 percent of those who jumping out of airplanes probably started out by riding in them first.

When it comes to marijuana and the use of other drugs, the more proper description of the relationships is this: Of all people who have tried marijuana, less than one third will try cocaine or hallucinogens, and less than four percent of marijuana smokers will try heroin.

As former drug "czar" Barry McCaffrey was fond of saying "you're entitled to your own opinion, but you're not entitled to your own data." That's why I use his data.

Brian Bennett is a freelance writer and anti-drugwar activist from Virgina, be sure and visit his Website which has loads of well researched charts and graphs created from the US governments own data. His work shows why they don't tell the whole truth in a sound bite. His most recent work concludes "we are spending three times as much money trying to stop drug use, than the actual drug use is supposedly costing us."