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U.S. deputy drug czar says pot is less dangerous than alcohol

Tudo

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U.S. deputy drug czar says pot is less dangerous than alcohol
President Obama's recent statements already have emboldened marijuana advocates
Shortly after President Barack Obama's comments that marijuana is no more dangerous than alcohol, his deputy drug czar has reluctantly agreed.



During a House Oversight Committee hearing Tuesday, Michael Botticelli, deputy director of the White House’s Office of National Drug Control Policy, was grilled about the harms of marijuana and mixed signals about the drug coming out of the Obama administration.
Botticelli's office considers marijuana dangerous and harmful, and the federal Drug Enforcement Administration considers it illegal.
"The administration continues to oppose attempts legalize marijuana and other drugs," Botticelli said during the hearing.
But Rep. Gerry Connolly, D-Va., challenged the drug czar's second-in-command.
“How many people die from marijuana overdoses every year?” Connolly asked Botticelli.
View gallery

Employees help customers at the crowded sales counter inside Medicine Man marijuana retail store, wh …

“I don’t know that I know," Botticelli replied. "It is very rare."
“Very rare. Now just contrast that with prescription drugs, unintentional deaths from prescription drugs; one American dies every 19 minutes,” Connolly said. “Nothing comparable to marijuana. Is that correct?"
Botticelli agreed.
“Hundreds of thousands of people die every year from alcohol related deaths. Automobile, liver disease, esophageal cancer, blood poisoning,” Connolly continued. "Is it not a scientific fact that there is nothing comparable with marijuana? I’m not saying it is good or bad, but when we look at deaths and illnesses, alcohol, other hard drugs are certainly — even prescription drugs — are a threat to public health in a way that just isolated marijuana is not. Isn’t that a scientific fact? Or do you dispute that fact?”
“I don’t dispute that fact,” Botticelli said.
View gallery

Seattle Seahawks-themed marijuana cupcakes are displayed at the Queen Anne Cannabis Club in Seattle, …

In an interview with the New Yorker magazine published last month, President Obama said that he views marijuana as a "bad habit" and "a vice" but no more dangerous than alcohol.
“As has been well documented, I smoked pot as a kid, and I view it as a bad habit and a vice, not very different from the cigarettes that I smoked as a young person up through a big chunk of my adult life," Obama said. "I don’t think it is more dangerous than alcohol.”
The president also said marijuana is less dangerous than alcohol “in terms of its impact on the individual consumer."
Those comments, coupled with the legalization of recreational marijuana in Colorado and Washington, have emboldened marijuana advocates and stirred similar efforts in other states.
Meanwhile, dozens of petitions related to marijuana legalization have been cropping up on online petition sites. One is urging the NFL to stop punishing players for marijuana use. Another wants Obama to remove pot from the Drug Enforcement Agency's list of top-tier illegal drugs.
"President Obama, if marijuana is safer than alcohol," the petition reads, "remove it from the DEA's schedule of drugs."
However, that doesn't seem likely, at least in the short term.
James Capra, chief of operations for the DEA, told a Senate panel last month that "going down the path to legalization in this country is reckless and irresponsible.
"I'm talking about the long-term impact of legalization in the United States," Capra continued. "It scares us. The treatment people are afraid, the education people are afraid. Law enforcement is worried what is going to happen. In every part of the world where this experiment has been tried, it has failed, time and time again."
http://news.yahoo.com/drug-czar-pot-marijuana-alcohol-dangerous-150529056.html
 

Skip

Active member
Veteran
James Capra, chief of operations for the DEA, told a Senate panel last month that "going down the path to legalization in this country is reckless and irresponsible.
"I'm talking about the long-term impact of legalization in the United States," Capra continued. "It scares us. The treatment people are afraid, the education people are afraid. Law enforcement is worried what is going to happen. In every part of the world where this experiment has been tried, it has failed, time and time again."
Yes, of course they're AFRAID - For their JOBS!

The only real danger concerning cannabis is its illegality, which turns more innocent people, mostly young or minorities, into "criminals" than any other law in the US.
 
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unregistered190

Senior
Veteran
Tudo, Saw that on Yahoo today.....exciting news, thanks for posting

bigal, norml.org usually has info like that...try looking there...but have not updated the news about Georgia yet so do not know if that will help you or not..will checkmyself later and post back

Skip, I agree
 

TheCleanGame

Active member
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Who else predicted Federal Prohibition would drop to Federal Taxation... within 5 years of Col Amendment 64 going through?

:tiphat:

Keep it Clean! :D
 

DrPimpNugs

Member
This article created some hope for me until I read that Botticelli's office considers marijuana dangerous and harmful, and the federal Drug Enforcement Administration considers it illegal.
 
X

XxxMedicatedxxX

Yes, of course they're AFRAID - For their JOBS!

Police and jails system hate legalize. No "problem" no job and no BIG moneys from national budget, true. :comfort:
Governements only looking how cheat us. We must be strong and smard.
 

slomocean

Member
James Capra, chief of operations for the DEA, told a Senate panel last month that "going down the path to legalization in this country is reckless and irresponsible.
"I'm talking about the long-term impact of legalization in the United States," Capra continued. "It scares us. The treatment people are afraid, the education people are afraid. Law enforcement is worried what is going to happen. In every part of the world where this experiment has been tried, it has failed, time and time again."

What experiment .... ending prohibition? yeah just look how hard that was for alchohol. oh wait....:wallbash:
 

wingdings

Member
Veteran
^Exactly, this guy is making up his own facts. As if this "marijuana experiment" is something new. Its been illegal for less that 100 years you douche. These people should be thrown in jail for criminalizing the cure for cancer.
 

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