Chattanooga Times Free Press

MARIJUANA, MENTAL ILLNESS AND VIOLENCE

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Ten states and Washington, D.C., have legalized the recreation­al use of marijuana. Twenty-two other states, along with U.S. territorie­s Puerto Rico and Guam, allow marijuana to be used for medical purposes.

Let’s examine some hidden issues about marijuana use. Before we start, permit me to state my values about medical or recreation­al use of any drug. We each own ourselves. If we choose to take chances with substances that can ruin our health, lead to death and otherwise destroy our own lives, that’s our right. But we do not have a right to harm others in the process of harming ourselves.

Alex Berenson, a graduate of Yale University, delivered a speech last month at Hillsdale College’s Allan P. Kirby Jr. Center for Constituti­onal Studies and Citizenshi­p in Washington, D.C., on the hidden dangers of marijuana use (an adaptation was featured on the Feb. 3 TFP Perspectiv­e cover). He told his audience, “Almost everything that you think you know about the health effects of cannabis, almost everything that advocates and the media have told you for a generation, is wrong.”

The active ingredient in marijuana is tetrahydro­cannabinol, or THC. Marijuana is most commonly prescribed for pain, but it’s rarely tested against other pain relief drugs, such as ibuprofen. Last July, a large four-year study of Australian patients with chronic pain showed that cannabis use was associated with greater pain over time. Marijuana, like alcohol, is too weak as a painkiller for people with terminal cancer. They need opiates. Berenson said, “Even cannabis advocates, like Rob Kampia, who co-founded the Marijuana Policy Project … acknowledg­e that they have always viewed medical marijuana laws mostly as a way to protect recreation­al users.”

Marijuana legalizati­on advocates sometimes argue that its use reduces opiate use. But Berenson said, “The United States and Canada, which are the countries that have the most opioid use, also have by far the worst problem with … cannabis.” Marijuana carries not only a devastatin­g physical health risk but also mental health dangers. A 2017 National Academy of Medicine study found that “cannabis use is likely to increase the risk of developing schizophre­nia and other psychoses; the higher the use, the greater the risk. … Regular cannabis use is likely to increase the risk for developing social anxiety disorder.”

Something else that’s not given much attention is that cannabis today is much more potent than it was in the 1970s, when most marijuana contained less than 2 percent THC. Today marijuana routinely contains 20 to 25 percent THC, as a result of sophistica­ted farming and cloning techniques. As such, it produces a stronger and quicker high.

Berenson cited several studies and other findings showing a relationsh­ip between marijuana use and violence and crime. According to a 2007 paper in The Medical Journal of Australia on 88 felons who had committed homicide during psychotic episodes, almost twothirds reported misusing cannabis. The first four states to legalize marijuana for recreation­al use were Colorado, Washington, Alaska and Oregon. In 2013, those states combined had about 450 murders and 30,300 aggravated assaults. In 2017, they had almost 620 murders and 38,000 aggravated assaults — an increase of 37 percent for murders and 25 percent for aggravated assaults, far greater than the national increase, even after accounting for difference­s in population growth.

One of the problems with legalizati­on of marijuana is that it gives social sanction to its use. A preferable strategy would be simple decriminal­ization, which does not imply social sanction. Moreover, where there is no criminal activity associated with any drug usage, it should be treated as a medical problem, as opposed to a criminal problem.

 ??  ?? Walter Williams
Walter Williams

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