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- Newsgroups: alt.drugs,talk.politics.drugs,alt.hemp
- From: "Paul Hager" <hagerp@cs.indiana.edu>
- Subject: The FINAL corrected version of "Marijuana Myths" (20-July-93)
- Message-ID: <1993Jul20.222126.820@news.cs.indiana.edu>
-
-
- MARIJUANA MYTHS
- by Paul Hager
- Chair, ICLU Drug Task Force
-
- 1. Marijuana causes brain damage
-
- The most celebrated study that claims to show brain damage is
- the rhesus monkey study of Dr. Robert Heath, done in the late
- 1970s. This study was reviewed by a distinguished panel of
- scientists sponsored by the Institute of Medicine and the National
- Academy of Sciences. Their results were published under the title,
- Marijuana and Health in 1982. Heath's work was sharply criticized
- for its insufficient sample size (only four monkeys), its failure
- to control experimental bias, and the misidentification of normal
- monkey brain structure as "damaged". Actual studies of human
- populations of marijuana users have shown no evidence of brain
- damage. For example, two studies from 1977, published in the
- Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) showed no
- evidence of brain damage in heavy users of marijuana. That same
- year, the American Medical Association (AMA) officially came out in
- favor of decriminalizing marijuana. That's not the sort of thing
- you'd expect if the AMA thought marijuana damaged the brain.
-
- 2. Marijuana damages the reproductive system
-
- This claim is based chiefly on the work of Dr. Gabriel Nahas,
- who experimented with tissue (cells) isolated in petri dishes, and
- the work of researchers who dosed animals with near-lethal amounts
- of cannabinoids (i.e., the intoxicating part of marijuana). Nahas'
- generalizations from his petri dishes to human beings have been
- rejected by the scientific community as being invalid. In the case
- of the animal experiments, the animals that survived their ordeal
- returned to normal within 30 days of the end of the experiment.
- Studies of actual human populations have failed to demonstrate that
- marijuana adversely affects the reproductive system.
-
- 3. Marijuana is a "gateway" drug -- it leads to hard drugs
-
- This is one of the more persistent myths. A real world
- example of what happens when marijuana is readily available can be
- found in Holland. The Dutch partially legalized marijuana in the
- 1970s. Since then, hard drug use -- heroin and cocaine -- have
- DECLINED substantially. If marijuana really were a gateway drug,
- one would have expected use of hard drugs to have gone up, not
- down. This apparent "negative gateway" effect has also been
- observed in the United States. Studies done in the early 1970s
- showed a negative correlation between use of marijuana and use of
- alcohol. A 1993 Rand Corporation study that compared drug use in
- states that had decriminalized marijuana versus those that had not,
- found that where marijuana was more available -- the states that
- had decriminalized -- hard drug abuse as measured by emergency room
- episodes decreased. In short, what science and actual experience
- tell us is that marijuana tends to substitute for the much more
- dangerous hard drugs like alcohol, cocaine, and heroin.
-
-
- 4. Marijuana suppresses the immune system
-
- Like the studies claiming to show damage to the reproductive
- system, this myth is based on studies where animals were given
- extremely high -- in many cases, near-lethal -- doses of
- cannabinoids. These results have never been duplicated in human
- beings. Interestingly, two studies done in 1978 and one done in
- 1988 showed that hashish and marijuana may have actually stimulated
- the immune system in the people studied.
-
- 5. Marijuana is much more dangerous than tobacco
-
- Smoked marijuana contains about the same amount of carcinogens
- as does an equivalent amount of tobacco. It should be remembered,
- however, that a heavy tobacco smoker consumes much more tobacco
- than a heavy marijuana smoker consumes marijuana. This is because
- smoked tobacco, with a 90% addiction rate, is the most addictive of
- all drugs while marijuana is less addictive than caffeine. Two
- other factors are important. The first is that paraphernalia laws
- directed against marijuana users make it difficult to smoke safely.
- These laws make water pipes and bongs, which filter some of the
- carcinogens out of the smoke, illegal and, hence, unavailable. The
- second is that, if marijuana were legal, it would be more
- economical to have cannabis drinks like bhang (a traditional drink
- in the Middle East) or tea which are totally non-carcinogenic.
- This is in stark contrast with "smokeless" tobacco products like
- snuff which can cause cancer of the mouth and throat. When all of
- these facts are taken together, it can be clearly seen that the
- reverse is true: marijuana is much SAFER than tobacco.
-
- 6. Legal marijuana would cause carnage on the highways
-
- Although marijuana, when used to intoxication, does impair
- performance in a manner similar to alcohol, actual studies of the
- effect of marijuana on the automobile accident rate suggest that it
- poses LESS of a hazard than alcohol. When a random sample of fatal
- accident victims was studied, it was initially found that marijuana
- was associated with RELATIVELY as many accidents as alcohol. In
- other words, the number of accident victims intoxicated on
- marijuana relative to the number of marijuana users in society gave
- a ratio similar to that for accident victims intoxicated on alcohol
- relative to the total number of alcohol users. However, a closer
- examination of the victims revealed that around 85% of the people
- intoxicated on marijuana WERE ALSO INTOXICATED ON ALCOHOL. For
- people only intoxicated on marijuana, the rate was much lower than
- for alcohol alone. This finding has been supported by other
- research using completely different methods. For example, an
- economic analysis of the effects of decriminalization on marijuana
- usage found that states that had reduced penalties for marijuana
- possession experienced a rise in marijuana use and a decline in
- alcohol use with the result that fatal highway accidents decreased.
- This would suggest that, far from causing "carnage", legal
- marijuana might actually save lives.
-
- 7. Marijuana "flattens" human brainwaves
-
- This is an out-and-out lie perpetrated by the Partnership for
- a Drug-Free America. A few years ago, they ran a TV ad that
- purported to show, first, a normal human brainwave, and second, a
- flat brainwave from a 14-year-old "on marijuana". When researchers
- called up the TV networks to complain about this commercial, the
- Partnership had to pull it from the air. It seems that the
- Partnership faked the flat "marijuana brainwave". In reality,
- marijuana has the effect of slightly INCREASING alpha wave
- activity. Alpha waves are associated with meditative and relaxed
- states which are, in turn, often associated with human creativity.
-
- 8. Marijuana is more potent today than in the past
-
- This myth is the result of bad data. The researchers who made
- the claim of increased potency used as their baseline the THC
- content of marijuana seized by police in the early 1970s. Poor
- storage of this marijuana in un-air conditioned evidence rooms
- caused it to deteriorate and decline in potency before any chemical
- assay was performed. Contemporaneous, independent assays of
- unseized "street" marijuana from the early 1970s showed a potency
- equivalent to that of modern "street" marijuana. Actually, the
- most potent form of this drug that was generally available was sold
- legally in the 1920s and 1930s by the pharmaceutical company
- Smith-Klein under the name, "American Cannabis".
-
- 9. Marijuana impairs short-term memory
-
- This is true but misleading. Any impairment of short-term
- memory disappears when one is no longer under the influence of
- marijuana. Often, the short-term memory effect is paired with a
- reference to Dr. Heath's poor rhesus monkeys to imply that the
- condition is permanent.
-
- 10. Marijuana lingers in the body like DDT
-
- This is also true but misleading. Cannabinoids are fat
- soluble as are innumerable nutrients and, yes, some poisons like
- DDT. For example, the essential nutrient, Vitamin A, is fat
- soluble but one never hears people who favor marijuana prohibition
- making this comparison.
-
- 11. There are over a thousand chemicals in marijuana smoke
-
- Again, true but misleading. The 31 August 1990 issue of the
- magazine Science notes that of the over 800 volatile chemicals
- present in roasted COFFEE, only 21 have actually been tested on
- animals and 16 of these cause cancer in rodents. Yet, coffee
- remains legal and is generally considered fairly safe.
-
- 12. No one has ever died of a marijuana overdose
-
- This is true. It was put in to see if you are paying
- attention. Animal tests have revealed that extremely high doses of
- cannabinoids are needed to have lethal effect. This has led
- scientists to conclude that the ratio of the amount of cannabinoids
- necessary to get a person intoxicated (i.e., stoned) relative to
- the amount necessary to kill them is 1 to 40,000. In other words,
- to overdose, you would have to consume 40,000 times as much
- marijuana as you needed to get stoned. In contrast, the ratio for
- alcohol varies between 1 to 4 and 1 to 10. It is easy to see how
- upwards of 5000 people die from alcohol overdoses every year and no
- one EVER dies of marijuana overdoses.
-
- WHAT IS THE ICLU DRUG TASK FORCE?
-
- The Indiana Civil Liberties Union (ICLU) Drug Task Force is
- involved in education and lobbying efforts directed toward
- reforming drug policy. Specifically, we support ACLU Policy
- Statement number 210 which calls for the legalization of marijuana.
- We also support an end to the drug war. In its place, we favor
- "harm reduction" strategies which treat drug abuse as what it is --
- a medical problem -- rather than a criminal justice problem.
-
- The Drug Task Force also works to end urine and hair testing
- of workers by private industry. These kinds of tests violate
- worker privacy to no good purpose because they detect past use of
- certain drugs (mostly marijuana) while ignoring others (e.g., LSD)
- and cannot detect current impairment. In situations where public
- and worker safety is a legitimate concern, we advocate impairment
- testing devices which reliably detect degradation of performance
- without infringing upon worker privacy.
-
- For more information about the activities of the Drug Task
- Force, call the ICLU at (317) 635-4059 or call Paul Hager at (812)
- 333-1384 or e-mail to hagerp@cs.indiana.edu on the InterNet.
-
- SOURCES
-
- 1) Marijuana and Health, Institute of Medicine, National Academy
- of Sciences, 1982. Note: the Committee on Substance Abuse and
- Habitual Behavior of the "Marijuana and Health" study had its
- part of the final report suppressed when it reviewed the
- evidence and recommended that possession of small amounts of
- marijuana should no longer be a crime (TIME magazine, July 19,
- 1982). The two JAMA studies are: Co, B.T., Goodwin, D.W.,
- Gado, M., Mikhael, M., and Hill, S.Y.: "Absence of cerebral
- atrophy in chronic cannabis users", JAMA, 237:1229-1230, 1977;
- and, Kuehnle, J., Mendelson, J.H., Davis, K.R., and New,
- P.F.J.: "Computed tomographic examination of heavy marijuana
- smokers", JAMA, 237:1231-1232, 1977.
-
- 2) See Marijuana and Health, ibid., for information on this
- research. See also, Marijuana Reconsidered (1978) by Dr.
- Lester Grinspoon.
-
- 3) The Dutch experience is written up in "The Economics of
- Legalizing Drugs", by Richard J. Dennis, The Atlantic Monthly,
- Vol 266, No. 5, Nov 1990, p. 130. See "A Comparison of
- Marijuana Users and Non-users" by Norman Zinberg and Andrew
- Weil (1971) for the negative correlation between use of
- marijuana and use of alcohol. The 1993 Rand Corporation study
- is "The Effect of Marijuana Decriminalization on Hospital
- Emergency Room Episodes: 1975 - 1978" by Karyn E. Model.
-
- 4) See a review of studies and their methodology in "Marijuana
- and Immunity", Journal of Psychoactive Drugs, Vol 20(1),
- Jan-Mar 1988. Studies showing stimulation of the immune
- system: Kaklamani, et al., "Hashish smoking and T-
- lymphocytes", 1978; Kalofoutis et al., "The significance of
- lymphocyte lipid changes after smoking hashish", 1978. The
- 1988 study: Wallace, J.M., Tashkin, D.P., Oishi, J.S.,
- Barbers, R.G., "Peripheral Blood Lymphocyte Subpopulations and
- Mitogen Responsiveness in Tobacco and Marijuana Smokers",
- 1988, Journal of Psychoactive Drugs, ibid.
-
- 5) The 90% figure comes from Health Consequences of Smoking:
- Nicotine Addiction, Surgeon General's Report, 1988. In Health
- magazine in an article entitled, "Hooked, Not Hooked" by
- Deborah Franklin (pp. 39-52), compares the addictives of
- various drugs and ranks marijuana below coffeine. For current
- information on cannabis drinks see Working Men and Ganja:
- Marijuana Use in Rural Jamaica by M. C. Dreher, Institute for
- the Study of Human Issues, 1982, ISBN 0-89727-025-8. For
- information on cannabis and actual cancer risk, see Marijuana
- and Health, ibid.
-
- 6) For a survey of studies relating to cannabis and highway
- accidents see "Marijuana, Driving and Accident Safety", by
- Dale Gieringer, Journal of Psychoactive Drugs, ibid. The
- effect of decriminalization on highway accidents is analyzed
- in "Do Youths Substitute Alcohol and Marijuana? Some
- Econometric Evidence" by Frank J. Chaloupka and Adit
- Laixuthai, Nov. 1992, University of Illinois at Chicago.
-
- 7) For information about the Partnership ad, see Jack Herer's
- book, The Emperor Wears No Clothes, 1990, p. 74. See also
- "Hard Sell in the Drug War", The Nation, March 9, 1992, by
- Cynthia Cotts, which reveals that the Partnership receives a
- large percentage of its advertizing budget from alcohol,
- tobacco, and pharmaceutical companies and is thus disposed
- toward exaggerating the risks of marijuana while downplaying
- the risks of legal drugs. For information on memory and the
- alpha brainwave enhancement effect, see "Marijuana, Memory,
- and Perception", by R. L. Dornbush, M.D., M. Fink, M.D., and
- A. M. Freedman, M.D., presented at the 124th annual meeting of
- the American Psychiatric Association, May 3-7, 1971.
-
- 8) See "Cannabis 1988, Old Drug New Dangers, The Potency
- Question" by Tod H Mikuriya, M.D. and Michael Aldrich, Ph.D.,
- Journal of Psychoactive Drugs, ibid.
-
- 9) See Marijuana and Health, ibid. Also see "Marijuana, Memory,
- and Perception", ibid.
-
- 10) The fat solubility of cannabinoids and certain vitamins is
- well known. See Marijuana and Health, ibid. For some
- information on vitamin A, see "The A Team" in Scientific
- American, Vol 264, No. 2, February 1991, p. 16.
-
- 11) See "Too Many Rodent Carcinogens: Mitogenesis Increases
- Mutagenesis", Bruce N. Ames and Lois Swirsky Gold, Science,
- Vol 249, 31 August 1990, p. 971.
-
- 12) Cannabis and alcohol toxicity is compared in Marijuana
- Reconsidered, ibid., p. 227. Yearly alcohol overdoses was
- taken from "Drug Prohibition in the United States: Costs,
- Consequences, and Alternatives" by Ethan A. Nadelmann,
- Science, Vol 245, 1 September 1989, p. 943.
- --
- paul hager hagerp@moose.cs.indiana.edu
-
- "The most formidable weapon against errors of every kind is reason."
- -- Thomas Paine, _The Age of Reason_
-
-
-