[NYTr] If Tobacco Regulation Works, Why Not Regulate Marijuana?

All the News That Doesn't Fit nytr at blythe-systems.com
Tue Dec 25 19:03:25 EST 2007


Alternet - Dec 24, 2007
http://www.alternet.org/story/71504/


If Tobacco Regulation Works, Why Not Regulate Marijuana?

By Rob Kampia

President Bush recently touted new survey results showing a modest drop
in teen use of marijuana and other drugs, but he failed to mention the
drug for which prevention efforts have had the most spectacular success
-- tobacco. If he had, he might have had to make some troubling
comparisons.

Citing the results of the annual Monitoring the Future survey, Bush
noted that drug use has declined from its recent peak in 1996, but
sidestepped the longer-term picture that doesn't look nearly so rosy.

If you go back 15 years, to 1992, drug use is up almost across the
board. For example, in 1992, 3.7 percent of eighth-graders were current
marijuana users, compared with 5.7 percent in 2007. For 12th-graders,
the figures were 11.9 percent and 18.8 percent, respectively.

This contrasts sharply with the figures on adolescent cigarette use.
Here, too, there was a bit of a rise in the mid-1990s, but overall, the
trend is much more encouraging.

While marijuana use is higher among all age groups than it was 15 years
ago, cigarette smoking has dropped remarkably. Among 12th-graders,
current cigarette smoking has dropped from 27.8 percent in 1992 to 21.6
percent this year. For eighth-graders, the drop is even more dramatic,
from 15.5 percent down to 7.1 percent.

And here's a figure that may be shocking: Among 10th-graders, 14.0
percent currently smoke cigarettes, while 14.2 percent smoke marijuana.
That's right: Slightly more 10th-graders now smoke marijuana than
cigarettes.

The sharp drop in cigarette use is not attributable to changing
attitudes about smoking. Teen disapproval of smoking is only marginally
higher than it was in 1992, for all age groups.

So what accounts for the drop in tobacco use? The regulation of
cigarette sales and marketing. As part of the Master Settlement
Agreement with 46 states, cigarette companies agreed to stop outdoor
advertising and to banish kid-friendly characters such as Joe Camel.
Even more important, we as a nation got serious about reducing tobacco
sales to kids.

In 1992, Congress passed the Synar Amendment, requiring states to enact
and enforce laws prohibiting sale of tobacco products to youth under
the age of 18, and setting up unannounced inspections of retail
outlets. The program has worked spectacularly well. In 1997, inspectors
found that over 40 percent of retailers were violating the ban on
cigarette sales to kids. By 2006, the violation rate had dropped to
just 10.9 percent, and it's still dropping.

So what does this have to do with marijuana?

Simply put, we have leverage over tobacco sellers that we don't have
with marijuana dealers. Because tobacco retailers and producers are
licensed and regulated, we have some control over them. If they want to
keep their lucrative businesses, cigarette merchants have a strong
incentive to follow the laws -- even laws they don't like.

Consider this: As part of their reaction to the Synar Amendment,
tobacco retailers adopted a "voluntary" program called "We Card."
Today, virtually any store that sells cigarettes posts a large,
brightly colored sign saying, "Under 18, No Tobacco. We Card."

Have you ever seen a marijuana dealer with a "We Card" sign?

If we want to control teen access to marijuana, it's time to learn a
lesson from our success with tobacco. Contrary to the mythology put out
by Drug Czar John Walters and his ilk, the complete prohibition of
marijuana for adults not only doesn't help to keep marijuana away from
kids, but it actually hampers such efforts.

Regulation works. Prohibition deprives authorities of the best tools
available to successfully regulate sales and marketing. Prohibition has
handed the entire, annual $113 billion marijuana industry over to
unregulated criminals, with entirely predictable consequences.

If we really want to control marijuana and keep it away from our kids,
it's time to bring it within the law and regulate it as we do tobacco.


[Rob Kampia is executive director of the Marijuana Policy Project in
Washington, DC. ]

© 2007 Independent Media Institute.



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