Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Panel against legalizing pot for recreation­al use

Nevada will vote on issue on November ballot

- By RAVEN JACKSON

In November, Nevadans will vote on whether to legalize recreation­al marijuana — Question 2 would allow adults 21 years and older to possess up to 1 ounce of marijuana legally. On Saturday, a panel of experts largely argued that legalizati­on might be a bad idea.

Earl White, former director of Weed & Seed Program, a crime and drug abuse prevention group, was one of five speakers who met Saturday at the University of Phoenix Las Vegas campus, 3755 Breakthrou­gh Way. He was adamantly against legalizing marijuana for recreation­al use, arguing pot use lessens someone’s motivation to study or find work.

“(Nevada is) already last in education and behind in unemployme­nt,” White said.

“There is no way that legalizing marijuana is a good thing for the community.”

Pat Hickey, Nevada coordinato­r for Smart Approaches to Marijuana, a group opposing legalized marijuana, agreed with White about the drug’s potential hazards. He said legalizing the drug would break legal tradition; America, he said, has never legalized marijuana.

Some people have suggested legalizing and taxing marijuana would raise enough tax revenue to offset potential societal hazards. But Hickey disagreed, pointing to alcohol.

Booze, he said, has turned out to be more of a money drainer than a moneymaker for society; taxing something problemati­c does no good.

Marijuana may be more dangerous than ever, Hickey suggested, because it’s grown in potency.

THC, the main psychoacti­ve ingredient in marijuana, is 20 percent to 30 percent more powerful in current strains than it was during his college days decades ago.

“President (Barack) Obama said studies have shown that young people who habitually smoke marijuana have a 28 percent chance of dropping out of high school, are more apt to do poorly on college entry exams, more apt to drop out of college and see a decrease in intelligen­ce quotient,” Hickey said.

Sgt. Craig Lousignont of the Metropolit­an Police Department said marijuana use may have factored in the city’s rising crime rates.

“It’s a cash crop, black market crop, crime has gone up because of it and it will negatively impact the city,” Lousignont said.

John Carter of the University of Phoenix faculty said political hype may be distorting people’s views on marijuana and making measured discussion about the drug impossible. He said people need to learn before they argue.

“There has been so much misinforma­tion about marijuana. It’s gonna make us kill and rape people — that turned out to be a lie,” Dr. John Carter, a University of Phoenix faculty member, said. “We need to talk about the facts. Let’s educate — take out politics and talk about people.”

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