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809 lines
41 KiB
Plaintext
ÕÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍ͸
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³ Courtesy of: ³
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³ Minnesota Grassroots Party ³
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³ P.O. Box 8011 ³
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³ St. Paul, MN 55108 ³
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³ ³
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³ Call for FREE INFORMATION! ³
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³ (612) 773-9683 ³
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³ (612) 822-3396 ³
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³ ³
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³ We need ACTIVISTS! ³
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³ Please donate you time, ³
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³ energy and intellect. ³
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ÔÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍ;
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"Prohibition will work great injury to the cause of
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temperance. ...for it goes beyond the bounds of reason
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in that it attempts to control a man's appetite by
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legislation and makes a crime out of things that are
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not crimes. A prohibition law strikes a blow at the
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very principles upon which our government was founded"
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-- Abraham Lincoln
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-------------------------------------------------------------------------
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Minnesota Grassroots Party Information Line
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612/773-9683
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Mail Box Prerecorded Message Mail Box Prerecorded Message
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-------------------------------------------------------------------------
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111 Opening Message 441 Accurate Hemp Info
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260 Intro. Bill of Rights 442 Hemp for the Ecology
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261-70 Bill of Rights 443 Hemp for fuel
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411 Information - Directory 444 Hemp for trees
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421 Intro / Grassroots Party 445 Hemp for Paper
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431 How to get active 446 Info on Drug Testing
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432 How to Join / GRP 447-450 Marijuana as medicine
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434 Upcoming Events/National 451 Hemp based products
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435 Legislative Alert 482 GRP address / phone #s
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-------------------------------------------------------------------------
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From: hagerp@iuvax.cs.indiana.edu (Paul Hager)
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Newsgroups: alt.drugs
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Subject: Drug-Free Indiana (long)
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Keywords: the insolence of office
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Message-ID: <55747@iuvax.cs.indiana.edu>
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Date: 29 Aug 90 21:48:37 GMT
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Distribution: alt
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Organization: Indiana University, Bloomington
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Lines: 737
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Following is a copy of my response to Jennifer Stabb, one of
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the coordinators of the Indiana Drug-Free Regional Office. I've
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had some dealings over the past couple of months with the
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Governor's Commission for a Drug-Free Indiana and Ms. Stabb
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centered around the Bloomington HEMP/NORML chapter's efforts to
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put together a panel discussion on the topic, "Marijuana Re-
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Legalization". I had figured that, as they were presumably the
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most well informed of the marijuana prohibitionists, they would
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make excellent panelists. Over a period of several weeks, the
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executive director of the commission, Joseph Mills, and several
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of his minions gave me what can best be described as "the
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runaround." People who I contacted left me hanging and when I
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finally was able to get some answer they were invariably busy or
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"not willing to participate at this time." When one starts
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getting the same phrase back from different people, one's
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suspicions are aroused.
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I actually encountered Ms. Stabb on the occasion of a public
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meeting that was intended to "celebrate" the unveiling of the
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regional "plan". She was friend6y enough initially: I was
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sartorially resplendent in one of my three-piece suits and looked
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every inch the stolid, professional community activist -- you
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know, head of the rotary club, that sort of thing. We talked
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Democratic politics (Governor Evan Bayh is the first Democratic
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Governor of Indiana in more than 2 decades and many of the people
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in Drug-Free Indiana are political appointees) briefly, which
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showed that I was one of the "good guys." Somewhere in our
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conversation I indicated that I was with Bloomington HEMP/NORML.
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From that moment, she became very stiff and uncomfortable -- her
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reaction wouldn't have been much different if I'd said that I was
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with the Charlie Manson fan club. Attempts to discuss the
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commission's policy on marijuana were met with canned responses
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about the commission's "charter" and how it prevented them from
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evaluating the law. She would never quite make eye contact and
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seemed to be immensely relieved when she found an excuse to
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terminate our meeting.
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My last encounter with Ms. Stabb was over the phone. It was
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on the occasion of her calling me back after I had requested if
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she knew of anyone who would be willing to argue for the
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prohibition side in our panel discussion. In our earlier
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conversation she was friendly enough but when she called me back
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it transpired that she had spoken to Joseph Mills, or so I
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gathered from her repeating the "not willing to participate at
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this time" phrase and saying that it covered everyone on the
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commission. Now that she had received t+big boss' imprimatur,
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she became the quintessential self-important bureaucrat: she
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became deprecating and supercilious, she laughed inappropriately
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and derisively, and rejected any discussion of Drug-Free Indiana
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policy as being a "dY,Q in which she would not participate.
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She did, however, say that she would send me some of their
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marijuana "information".
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I received the information in the mail and was appalled,
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thought not very surprised. I prepared the following response
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which I sent off this morning. I thought I would share it with
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alt.drug readers.
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Comments are, of course, welcome.
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--------------------------Begin Article-------------------------
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28-Aug-1990
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To: Jennifer Stabb,
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South Central Coordinator, Drug Free Indiana
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From: Paul Hager,
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Research Coordinator, Bloomington HEMP/NORML
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Subject: Literature received from you.
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Dear Ms. Stabb,
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Thank you for promptly sending your marijuana/cannabis
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literature. I apologize for not being equally prompt in my
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response, but I felt that it would be best if I gave this
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material thorough scrutiny and I wanted to be able to provide
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citations, where appropriate, for my comments. I've broken
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things down into categories of harmful effects claimed by your
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material and what the research actually shows.
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Dr. Robert Heath
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The "Drug Awareness Information Newsletter" entitled "Why
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Marijuana is not a Soft Drug" by Biernson and Moulton contains a
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presentation of work done by Robert Heath that purports to show
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that long-term, heavy use of marijuana leads to damage.
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Here's what they say about the "world renowned" work of Dr.
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Heath:
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"The following is a _typical_ [emphasis mine] experiment
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performed by Dr. Heath. For 6 months a monkey smoked the
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equivalent (for a human) of 1.5 joints per day. The monkey
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was allowed to recover for 6 months, and then was
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sacrificed. Brain waves were measured from electrodes
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embedded in the brain. The brain waves became severely
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distorted after 2 months of smoking, and remained severely
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distorted until the monkey was sacrificed, 6 months after
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smoking had stopped."
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The newsletter goes on to describe the "serious damage" found in
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the brain of the autopsied monkey.
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The "brain wave" anomalies Heath apparently claims to have
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found do not comport with studies done of human subjects (e.g.,
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see "Marijuana, Memory, and Perception" by Dornbush, Fink, and
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Freedman, 1971), which have shown that cannabis increases alpha
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waves (often associated with a meditative or creative state).
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This effect lasts only as long as the cannabis intoxication. No
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lasting effect has ever been scientifically validated.
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The source quoted by Biernson and Moulton is not an
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authoritative scientific source nor the good Dr. Heath himself;
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it is Peggy Mann, author of a lurid bit of propaganda called "Pot
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Safari". The writers of these anti-marijuana propaganda books
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borrow from each other and purvey myths and bad science in an
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unending roundelay. The books actually have a lot in common,
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both structurally and intellectually, with pseudo-scientific
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books dealing with UFOs or the Bermuda Triangle. Before I give
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you the straight dope on Dr. Heath, I'll share with you a typical
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example of one of the propaganda books. This one is "Marihuana
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Today" by George K. Russell.
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"Heath demonstrated with objective measurements of brain
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wave patterns that the intake of less than two marihuana
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cigarettes a week for three months (a total of only 20
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marihuana cigarettes!) caused serious, and quite possibly
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permanent, alteration of brain function in these
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experimental animals.
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"In these tests, one _group_ [emphasis mine] of animals was
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made to inhale cannabis smoke three times daily, five times
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a week, for six months (heavy dosage level); a second
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_group_ [emphasis mine] inhaled somewhat less than two
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marihuana cigarettes a week for six months (moderate
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dosage); a third _group_ [emphasis mine] received daily
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intravenous injections of delta-9-THC for six months.
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Control _animals_ [emphasis mine] received cannabis smoke
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devoid of THC. Brain wave patterns were monitored regularly
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during the six month test period."
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The words I italicized were in order to emphasize that Mr.
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Russell is deliberately misleading the reader. You see, each of
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the "groups" was actually a group of one. Here is what the
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Institute of Medicine, "Marijuana and Health" had to say about
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Heath:
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"[descriptions of brain alteration] These changes appear
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dramatic but they must be interpreted with caution. The
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three studies are based principally upon examination of two
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limited brain areas in three treated monkeys, two receiving
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marijuana smoke and one intravenous delta-9-THC; a fourth
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treated animal was added to the last study and more brain
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areas were analyzed in it (Heath et al., 1980). Further,
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although the material was evaluated 'doubleblind' after
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electron micrographs had been made, it would appear that
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fixation, tissue preparation, and photography were carried
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out before these safeguards against bias were applied. It
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is possible that unknown but systematic differences occurred
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between experimental and control animals in fixation and
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preparation fixation and preparation of tissue or in
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selection of samples for micrography. In addition, it
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should be noted that at least one of the changes noted,
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clumping of vesicles (Harper, et al., 1977) is a normal
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variant in the synaptic morphology of the axon terminals in
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mammalian brain (Sipe and Moore, 1977) and does not
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represent a pathological change. Also, these studies have
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not been replicated and, because the basis of the study for
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interpretation is such a limited sample, it is concluded
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that no definitive interpretation can be made at this time.
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However, the possibility that marijuana may produce chronic,
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ultra-structural changes in the brain has not been ruled out
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and should be investigated."
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If you are used to reading scientific papers, you will note that
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Dr. Heath and his co-workers don't come out looking very good in
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the above assessment. He didn't eliminate bias and his
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experimental sample was inadequate. He failed to realize that
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some of the "abnormality" he found was actually "normal". Though
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couched in the detached, objective language of the scientist, the
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report makes clear that the Institute of Medicine panel didn't
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think very much of Dr. Heath's work. And, they could have really
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slammed Heath, had they been so inclined. It turns out that
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another area of systematic experimental bias could have been
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described. The smoke inhalation studies failed to control for
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carbon monoxide. This, by the way, explains the anomolous result
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of the heavy and moderately dosed monkeys showing no apparent
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dose response to THC. ("Dose response" means an effect that
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correlates with the dosage such that the greater the dose, the
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greater the response.) All in all, Heath's work is so flawed
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that it is of essentially zero value in assessing marijuana
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health risks.
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In sharp contrast with Heath's findings are two human
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studies that showed no brain damage or atrophy at all (Co,
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Goodwin, et al., "Absence of cerebral atrophy in chronic cannabis
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users", JAMA, 1977 and Kuehnle et al., "Computed tomographic
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examination of heavy marijuana smokers", JAMA, 1977). None of
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the material I received references these studies. Why?
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Effect of marijuana on reproductive cells
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Included in the material you sent was a one page AIby
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Dr. Gabriel Nahas that summarizes his work on chromosomal
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breakage and his belief that marijuana would adversely affect
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"sex cells". It should be pointed out that Nahas' work involved
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somatic (not sex) cells _in_vitro_ (i.e., in a test tube or petri
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dish) and his work has never been replicated. If you will
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carefully read the paper you will see that all of the studies
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mentioned were with lymphocytes or lung cells. Nahas then jumps
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from mentioning these studies to concluding that cannabis affects
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"sex cells" _in_vivo_ (i.e., in the body). A careful, critical
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reader would see that Nahas was making an unwarranted leap. In
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fact, in December, 1983, Nahas, under pressure because of the
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questionable extrapolations he made from his work, backed away
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from his conclusions. In other words, the material you sent has
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been renounced by Nahas himself! Demonstrating chromosomal
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breakage of cells in vitro is hardly as significant as the tone
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of the paper would lead a reader to believe. Similar results
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could be obtained from testing aspirin or caffeine.
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Some laboratory work has been done on the effect of
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marijuana on reproductive cells. Human studies have, to date,
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failed to demonstrate adverse effects in actual populations (for
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example, see the Costa Rica study, Coggins, et al.). The few
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laboratory studies that have been done that suggest adverse
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effects have been flawed by failure to control for experimental
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bias and have had small sample sizes.
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Animal studies have, however, demonstrated interference with
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hormone production and/or normal reproductive cell development.
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Lest you conclude that this validates the idea that marijuana
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poses a special threat to users, I will give you some information
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about how these studies were done. Typically, very high dosages
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of THC were administered over a period of weeks or months to test
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animals. For example, 10 mg/kg THC administered to young male
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rats slows development of testes, prostate and seminal vesicles.
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If you do a simple comparison of this dose versus the ED50
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("effective" or intoxicating dose), you'll find that the dosage
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administered is several hundred times the intoxicating dose.
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Another experiment using mice involved "intraperitoneal
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injections of delta-9-THC, cannabidiol, or cannabinol at doses
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approaching or exceeding the LD50" (Institute of Medicine, 1982
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reporting on Zimmerman, et al., 1979). The LD50 is the dosage
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required to kill 50% of dosed animals. The result of the
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experiment was that 2.4% to 5.0% of the sperm produced was
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"abnormal".
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Most significantly, the adverse effects (again, found only
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in the animal studies) are reversible; that is, normal function
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returns within a month of discontinuing the dosing.
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The idea of dosing experimental animals at very high levels
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is a common way to test for _potential_ health effects in humans.
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Often, a dose response is established by doing regression
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analysis on a few data points obtained by such studies. This
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analysis is then _validated_by_epidemiological_studies_ on human
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populations. For example, among the most well established dose
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response relationships is that between cancer and ionizing
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radiation. Animal studies and studies of human populations
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(chiefly Hiroshima and Nagasaki survivors, radiation workers,
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radium workers, etc.) have led to the simple formulation that one
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cancer results from a population dose of 10000 man-REM. In other
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words, for every 10000 people who each receive one REM (or 1000
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milli-REM), one cancer will result. The dose response is linear
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in that if 10000 people each receive two REM, two cancers will
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result, and so on.
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What research tells us about cannabis can be pretty much
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summed up as follows: animal studies show some slight cause for
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concern, human studies do not.
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Amotivational syndrome and behavior change
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Perhaps of all of the "evils" associated with cannabis, none
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is as widely known as "amotivational syndrome". This scientific
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sounding name disguises the fact that the "amotivational
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syndrome" has never been substantiated. Interestingly, one of
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the pamphlets you sent is at odds with both itself and the rest
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of the material.
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"Personality and Behavior: MARIJUANA" by Christina Dye
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presents the intriguing picture of someone who obviously did some
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research and then had trouble integrating it into the usual anti-
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marijuana party line. As a consequence, she ends up generating
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subtle contradictions. For example, the following quote from the
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"Institute of Medicine, National Academy of Sciences, 1982"
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[actually, the report is entitled, "Marijuana and Health"] is
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included in the pamphlet:
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"Interpretation of the evidence linking marijuana to
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'amotivational syndrome' is difficult. Such symptoms have
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been known to occur in the absense of marijuana. Even if
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there is an association between this syndrome and use of
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marijuana, that does not prove that marijuana causes the
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syndrome."
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This excerpt casts some doubt on whether or not there really is
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such a thing as "amotivational syndrome" -- and yet, later on in
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the pamphlet, Ms. Dye lapses back into orthodoxy with a lengthy
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discursive section on the "amotivational syndrome". At her
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conclusion, she refers back to the National Academey of Sciences
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study and then characterizes amotivation as "... something of a
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chicken-or-the-egg situation", thus undermining her previous
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statements. Clearly, Ms. Dye is suffering from severe cognitive
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dissonance on this subject.
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If Ms. Dye had expended just a little more effort, she could
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have uncovered a great deal of evidence disconfirming the
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"amotivational syndrome". The last of the Jamaica ganja studies,
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written up as a monograph entitled "Ganja in Jamaica," used an
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objective scale to measure productivity of the ganja smokers
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versus the non-smokers. Though the results failed to meet the
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0.05 significance level required for statZ.Wk1validation,
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every single one of the ganja smoking groups outperformed the
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non-ganja smokers. Had they been amotivational, they should have
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consistently underperformed.
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Other examples abound. Two survey studies published in the
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early 70's are typical: "Personality Correlates of Undergraduate
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Marijuana Use" by Hogan, Mankin, Conway and Fox, and "A
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Comparison of Marijuana Users and Non-Users" by Zinberg and Weil.
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There was no difference in terms of GPA or other indices of
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motivation.
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In Hogan, et al., the California Psychological Inventory
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(CPI) personality test was given. Users scored low on the
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following scales: Socialization, Responsibility, Communality, and
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Achievement via Conformance. On the other hand, users scored
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high on Achievement via Independence and Empathy, which the
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researchers concluded meant that they would have the sort of
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"achievement motivation necessary for success in graduate school"
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and that they were socially perceptive and sensitive to the needs
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and feelings of others. The non-users correlated negatively on
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the above noted scales which means that when the users scored
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high, non-users scored low and vice versa. The researchers noted
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that the non-users test results gave evidence that they were
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"perhaps too deferential to external authority, narrow in their
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interests and overcontrolled."
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Zinberg and Weil failed to find evidence of personality
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change that could be attributed to marijuana use. Interviews
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with "chronic" users of marijuana revealed that they were "bitter
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about society's attitude toward marijuana" and "that being
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defined as a deviant and law-breaker for something they could not
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accept as criminal had driven them into increasingly negative
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attitudes toward the larger society".
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In addition to the survey studies, numerous longitudinal
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studies have been done over the past 20 years. A number of them
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are cited in "Marijuana and Health", the same report referenced
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by Ms. Dye. They are fairly uniform in demonstrating that the
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personality characteristics anti-marijuana advocates associate
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with marijuana use are pre-existing in childhood and actually can
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be used to PREDICT future ABUSE of drugs, including marijuana.
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Perhaps the most definitive of the longitudinal studies was by
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Shedler and Block, printed in the May 1990 issue of "American
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Psychologist". Entitled "Adolescent Drug Use and Psychological
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Health -- A Longitudinal Inquiry", it followed 101 subjects over
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a 15 year pY.k1 from age 3 to age 18.
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Shedler and Block demonstrated rather conclusively that
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moderate drug use (marijuana) actually correlated with
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psychological health. Absolute abstainers and heavy users showed
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similar maladjustment on a number of personality indices. This
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validated similar results obtained in earlier studies (e.g.,
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Hogan, et al., above) and lends confidence to the results.
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Incidentally, Shedler and Block had some rather harsh things
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to say about simple-minded drug education programs of the "just
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||
say no" variety. Here's a sample:
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"Current efforts at drug 'education' seem flawed on two
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counts. First, they are alarmist, pathologizing normative
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adolescent experimentation and limit-testing, and perhaps
|
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frightening parents and educators unnecessarily. Second,
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and of far greater concern, they trivialize the factors
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underlying drug abuse, implicitly denying their depth and
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pervasiveness."
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Marijuana and supression of the immune system
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The paper by Guy Cabral first offers up the usual anecdotal
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accounts (i.e., not scientifically valid) and follows with
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references to animal studies of the familiar ultra-high dosage
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variety. No epidemiological data has ever been generated to
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support a rise in infections stemming from marijuana use.
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Moreover, numerous studies have shown NO immune system
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suppression, including Gupta et al., 1974; Petersen et al., 1975
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||
& 1976; White et al., 1975; Cushman and Khurana, 1977; and,
|
||
McDonough et al. 1980. Why weren't these studies included in the
|
||
information packet?
|
||
|
||
There are two studies that might well be an interesting
|
||
addition to your marijuana information packet. These studies
|
||
(Kaklamani et al., "Hashish smoking and T-lymphocytes", 1978;
|
||
Kalofoutis et al., "The significance of lymphocyte lipid changes
|
||
after smoking hashish", 1978) demonstrated that cannabis smoked
|
||
as hashish actually stimulated the immune system.
|
||
|
||
Marijuana psychosis and panic reaction
|
||
|
||
So-called "marijuana psychosis" or "toxic psychosis" is
|
||
described in some of the material you sent. A very small number
|
||
of cases of this "psychosis" have appeared in the Western medical
|
||
literature over the years. A review of these cases invariably
|
||
reveals a prior existing condition (such as diagnosed
|
||
schizophrenia) or other drug use.
|
||
|
||
In apparent conflict are reports of "toxic psychosis" coming
|
||
from Asia and Africa. There, the reporting physicians are wont
|
||
to identify cannabis as the culprit for any psychotic episode.
|
||
In India, for example, it is apparently common practice to
|
||
diagnose a person admitted for a "psychotic episode" as suffering
|
||
from "marijuana psychosis". Independent Western researchers have
|
||
found no basis for this description and attribute it to such
|
||
factors as the doctors' class-based rejection of their culture's
|
||
marijuana use. (Note: "Ganja in Jamaica" has some particularly
|
||
good material on how class affects perceptions of marijuana use.)
|
||
|
||
|
||
In his book, "Marijuana Reconsidered", Lester Grinspoon
|
||
offered up an intriguing hypothesis that has never been tested.
|
||
Given that 65% of American soldiers in Vietnam used marijuana at
|
||
least once and a fairly high percentage were regular users, is it
|
||
possible that marijuana protected the troops from psychoses?
|
||
Here is what Grinspoon had to say:
|
||
|
||
"The psychiat.kincidence rate for U.S. Army troops in
|
||
Vietnam was reported to be 12 per 1000 strength per year
|
||
during the calendar years 1965 and 1966. This rate is much
|
||
lower than that recorded for both the Korean War (73 per
|
||
1000 strength per year July 1950 to December 1952) and World
|
||
War II (between 28 and 101 per 1000 strength per year
|
||
September 1944 through May 1945). During World War II, 23
|
||
percent of all cases evacuated for medical reasons were
|
||
psychiatric cases; the percentage for the comparable group
|
||
in Vietnam has been aproximately 6 percent."
|
||
|
||
Grinspoon went on to posit other factors contributing to the
|
||
decreased incidence (changes in rotation policy, better training,
|
||
rapid treatment of wounded in forward areas). Unfortunately,
|
||
this idea that marijuana might actually protect users from
|
||
psychoses or neuroses is not the sort of thing likely to be
|
||
researched in an environment that tends to sanction and report
|
||
only anti-marijuana studies.
|
||
|
||
"Panic attacks" associated with marijuana are mentioned in
|
||
Ms. Dye's pamphlet, among others. While Ms. Dye makes it appear
|
||
that such occurances are common, it is more accurate to say that
|
||
some users have occasionally had the experience of feeling
|
||
anxious, paranoid, or confused. This is very seldom a problem.
|
||
"Marijuana and Health" says that, "The frequency of such
|
||
reactions appears to be higher when the setting for use is not a
|
||
favorable one; for example, when the user sees the environment as
|
||
threatening." Such an environment might be one in which users
|
||
can lose their jobs for casual use at home or one in which drug
|
||
warriors are seeking to amend the state constitution to make it
|
||
easier to confiscate the property of a "drug criminal". That
|
||
kind of environment could induce feelings of paranoia in a person
|
||
who had never smoked marijuana.
|
||
|
||
Frankly, a "panic attack", if it were severe enough, would
|
||
probably put the individual off of smoking marijuana. This would
|
||
suggest that the "problem", such as it is, is self-limiting. It
|
||
should also be mentioned that cannabis has demonstrated some
|
||
anti-anxiety potential (Regelson et al., 1976; Nakano et al.,
|
||
1978, using Nabilone, a synthetic cannabinoid). This further
|
||
reinforces the idea that setting is an important factor in
|
||
determining how a person is going to react to the drug.
|
||
|
||
Gateway drug
|
||
|
||
I was surprised to see that several of the pamphlets still
|
||
championed the "gateway" idea. For example, the pamphlet "The
|
||
Facts About MARIJUANA" says, "Research shows that marijuana is
|
||
the _gateway_ [italics in original] into further illegal drug
|
||
useage." Ms. Dye's pamphlet says, "Today, of course, most people
|
||
recognize the old marijuana myths as baseless in fact: Smoking
|
||
marijuana doesn't inevitably lead to violent crime, heroin
|
||
addiction, prostitution or insanity." I draw your attention to
|
||
the "heroin addiction" part of the statement. Ms. Dye apparently
|
||
couldn't quite bring herself to say outright that the whole
|
||
"gateway" idea is baseless but she certainly came perilously
|
||
close.
|
||
|
||
Some studies have shown a _negative_ correlation between
|
||
marijuana and use of other drugs, including alcohol. Zinberg and
|
||
Weil (cited above) found that marijuana users were actually less
|
||
inclined to use other drugs, including alcohol. The Costa Rica
|
||
study showed that the marijuana users had almost no alcoholism.
|
||
(The book "Licit and Illicit Drugs", by Brecher, reports that
|
||
during alcohol prohibition, as alcohol became more and more
|
||
expensive, legal cannabis became an attractive alternative.
|
||
Hashish was cheap and readily available in New York city which
|
||
had 1200 hash parlors by the late 1920's. Perhaps such success
|
||
as Prohibition enjoyed can be explained by the availablity of
|
||
cannabis as an alternative intoxicant.)
|
||
|
||
If marijuana were truly a "gateway" drug, it could be
|
||
expected that making it legal would result in a massive increase
|
||
in the use and abuse of hard drugs. This experiment has actually
|
||
been performed in the Netherlands where personal possession of
|
||
less than 30 grams of marijuana or hashish is no longer
|
||
prosecuted. There, use of heroin has DECLINED over the past
|
||
decade.
|
||
|
||
In my recitation of the preceeding, I am not arguing that
|
||
marijuana protects a population from going on to harder drugs; I
|
||
am, however, pointing out that a claim that marijuana is a
|
||
"gateway" drug must explain away a large body of disconfirming
|
||
evidence. The reality is that societal and behavioral factors
|
||
are the determinates of drug abuse. The longitudinal studies
|
||
cited above demonstrate that USE of marijuana does not predispose
|
||
one to ABUSE of marijuana or any other drug. Simple-minded
|
||
"gateway" explanations are not scientifically valid and have no
|
||
place in either policy making or drug education.
|
||
|
||
Marijuana and automobile accidents
|
||
|
||
Another item cited in your anti-marijuana literature is a
|
||
reference to research that has shown that "tracking" is impaired
|
||
4 to 8 hours after initially smoking even though the person feels
|
||
subjectively "sober". Your literature didn't quite report this
|
||
accurately, so it left the impression of significant impairment
|
||
in many areas -- which has not been demonstrated. "Tracking", by
|
||
the way, describes the act of following a moving stimulus. In
|
||
contrast with marijuana, alcohol impairs coordination, motor
|
||
control, and reaction time from 36 to 48 hours after intoxication
|
||
(as reported in a recent issue of "Scientific American" in the
|
||
"Science and the Citizen" section). Alcohol is legal and
|
||
marijuana is not. Why?
|
||
|
||
Simulators (a form of impairment tester) have shown that a
|
||
person heavily intoxicated by marijuana is impaired to a similar
|
||
degree to a person intoxicated by alcohol at the 0.08% to 0.1%
|
||
BAC level. Accident surveys have also shown some evidence that
|
||
marijuana will potentiate accidents at a rate similar to alcohol.
|
||
This latter evidence remains inconclusive, however. For example,
|
||
while studies of fatal accidents have shown a similar proportion
|
||
of drivers under the influence of THC and of alcohol, 85% of the
|
||
THC-intoxicated drivers also had alcohol in the blood, thus
|
||
making it difficult to place the primary blame on marijuana.
|
||
Nonetheless, I think it is fair to go by the simulator data and
|
||
say that marijuana should be treated the same as alcohol as far
|
||
as driving a car is concerned. It should also be noted that
|
||
antihistimines and tranquilizers (both legal) significantly
|
||
impair performance. These drugs are seldom included in the
|
||
calculus of accident prevention and legal penalty. Why?
|
||
|
||
Instead of focusing on the irresponsible use of marijuana,
|
||
and excluding consideration of the irresponsible use of legal
|
||
drugs, it makes more sense to develop strategies that make it
|
||
less likely that people will drive while impaired. The Japanese
|
||
manage to consume large quantities of alcohol but have only 20%
|
||
the rate of accidents of the U.S. The Japanese accept public
|
||
intoxication and make special provision for getting an
|
||
intoxicated person home (free taxi service for inebriates, for
|
||
example). If it is possible for another country to develop a
|
||
policy that reduces deaths and accidents from intoxicated
|
||
drivers, why isn't it possible for the U.S. to do the same thing?
|
||
|
||
Marijuana and cancer
|
||
|
||
Sir Percival Potts, in the late 18th Century, observed that
|
||
chimney sweeps often developed cancer of the scrotum. From this
|
||
he drew the inference that some property of the soot and/or
|
||
creosote, to which the sweeps were exposed, was the cause of the
|
||
cancer. We now know that he was correct. Reactions in
|
||
hydrocarbon combustion byproducts produce compounds that are
|
||
carcinogenic.
|
||
|
||
Before I get too embroiled in all of this, I should state
|
||
that this whole argument is really a red herring. The animal
|
||
studies have never demonstrated that the active constituents of
|
||
cannabis are carcinogenic apart from the smoke. Cannabis need
|
||
not be smoked. For example, "bhang" is a drink; so is cannabis
|
||
tea. Cannabis may be eaten as an ingredient of food or dessert.
|
||
If users have accurate information about the cancer risk from
|
||
smoking then they can choose to eliminate that method of taking
|
||
the drug, if they so desire. Why should the state be concerned
|
||
beyond providing the necessary information?
|
||
|
||
If people choose to smoke marijuana, despite some level of
|
||
cancer risk, then what? Certain factors must be borne in mind,
|
||
chief among these that carcinogens present in the smoke are
|
||
effectively filtered by water pipes or similar delivery systems.
|
||
Such "paraphenalia" are illegal in many states. Why? Is it to
|
||
render marijuana smoking artificially more dangerous? That seems
|
||
to be the only plausible explanation. Consider, too, that the
|
||
Berkeley marijuana carcinogenicity studies which concluded that
|
||
marijuana was 1.5 times more carcinogenic than tobacco are based
|
||
on the following assumptions:
|
||
|
||
1) marijuana leaves a. =5AIwith tobacco leaves;
|
||
|
||
This assumed that a marijuana smoker would smoke as
|
||
much as a tobacco smoker.
|
||
|
||
As to the first assumption, the marijuana "buds" have 1/3 or less
|
||
carcinogenic tars than the leaves, but "buds" are not compared.
|
||
Users will almost invariably prefer smoking "buds" to leaves. A
|
||
cigarette smoker generally consumes over a pack (20 cigarettes) a
|
||
day, whereas even a heavy marijuana smoker is unlikely to smoke
|
||
more than 5 to 7 marijuana cigarettes a day. Another factor to
|
||
include is that the more potent forms of marijuana available
|
||
today require that less of it needs to be smoked in order to
|
||
achieve the desired effect, which means that less carcinogenic
|
||
smoke needs to be inhaled.
|
||
|
||
Marijuana and the lungs
|
||
|
||
As indicated in the previous set of comments, this is all a
|
||
red herring but I'll play the game. As it happens, according to
|
||
the work of Dr. Donald Tashkin, of UC*1 the effect of marijuana
|
||
is something of a mixed bag, unlike the effect of tobacco which
|
||
is uniformly negative. Although marijuana does act as an
|
||
irritant to the large passageways (Tashkin et al., 1980), it also
|
||
acts as a bronchodialator (Tashkin et al., 1974 & 1975). This
|
||
has led to suggestions that cannabis might be a useful treatment
|
||
for asthma or emphysema.
|
||
|
||
Tashkin has done some long term studies of heavy marijuana
|
||
smokers but curiously, none of the subjects has gone on to
|
||
develop lung cancer, thus far. In line with this, surprising
|
||
results have come out of studies in Jamaica (Rubin and Comitas,
|
||
1975) and Costa Rica (Hernandez-Bolanos et al., 1976) which found
|
||
no difference in chronic respiratory disease between marijuana
|
||
smokers and non-smokers. It is possible that cannabis may offer
|
||
some protection to users but I personally remain skeptical; it
|
||
seems counterintuitive. Other studies that have shown an
|
||
increase in respiratory disease are confounded by the fact that
|
||
the marijuana smokers were also tobacco smokers. For now, the
|
||
jury is still out.
|
||
|
||
Odds and ends
|
||
|
||
There remain some items that were mentioned in the anti-
|
||
marijuana literature that I have not yet addressed. This
|
||
includes such items as the unsubstantiated claim that marijuana
|
||
has caused an increase in the suicide rate. Where this "fact"
|
||
came from is anyone's guess. There is also the litany of
|
||
"marijuana impairs short term memory" which is never qualified by
|
||
stating that this impairment is a feature of being intoxicated
|
||
and wears off with the intoxication. I've actually encountered
|
||
educated, otherwise knowledgeable people who have accepted this
|
||
misleading statement, which is often juxtaposed with references
|
||
to Dr. Heath's brain damaged rhesus monkeys, as meaning that the
|
||
impairment is permanent.
|
||
|
||
As for the continued use of the invidious comparison of THC
|
||
and DDT: why not compare THC and Vitamin A, which would be
|
||
equally valid but not as sensational?
|
||
|
||
One of the pamphlets mentions that marijuana is a "schedule
|
||
I drug". This is true. Do you know what "schedule I" means? It
|
||
means that the drug has no medical value and is especially
|
||
dangerous! This is a travesty! The recent discovery of receptor
|
||
sites in the brain for cannabinoids got a bit of news coverage.
|
||
The following excerpt from the UPI is typical of the reporting:
|
||
|
||
"The discovery should enable researchers to decipher
|
||
marijuana's mysterious abilities and could give scientists
|
||
important new insights into how the human brain operates,
|
||
experts said.
|
||
|
||
"The work could result in new drugs to treat diseases by
|
||
_mimicking_marijuana's_long-known_medicinal_benefits_
|
||
[emphasis mine] without producing unwanted narcotic effects,
|
||
researchers said."
|
||
|
||
The ugly little secret seems to have slipped out: marijuana DOES
|
||
have medical value.
|
||
|
||
"Marijuana and Health", which both Christina Dye and I
|
||
reference, seems to waffle a bit in its conclusions. For
|
||
example, the conclusions section, page 5, says, in part:
|
||
|
||
"The scientific evidence published to date indicates that
|
||
marijuana has a broad range of psychological and biological
|
||
effects, some of which, at least under certain conditions,
|
||
are harmful to human health."
|
||
|
||
With all of the qualifications, marijuana doesn't come off
|
||
sounding so bad. In another place, however, marijuana use is
|
||
said to justify "serious national concern"
|
||
|
||
1I1e1 politics helps to explain this inconsistency. I say "clearly" because
|
||
another part of the study, the part conducted by the "Committee
|
||
on SubsW9
|
||
Abuse and Habitual Behavior", was disavowed and
|
||
suppressed when it recommended that possession or private use of
|
||
small amounts of marijuana should no longer be a crime (for a
|
||
reference, see "Time" magazine, July 19, 1982).
|
||
|
||
Final thoughts
|
||
|
||
This has run on long enough. It's a lot of stuff to wade
|
||
through, particularly if you want to check up on my sources. If
|
||
you have any questions, please feel free to give me a phone call.
|
||
|
||
The last time we spoke, in reponse to my suggestion that we
|
||
meet and discuss Drug Free Indiana's position on marijuana, you
|
||
stated that you "didn't want to debate" the issue. I consider
|
||
this reaction to have been unwarranted, particularly as your job
|
||
carries with it a certain responsibility to be receptive to
|
||
public input.
|
||
|
||
Presumably, you have finished reading my responses to the
|
||
anti-marijuana literature. You are now confronted with a
|
||
problem. I've seriously called into question every major item
|
||
that is used to justify treating marijuana differently from
|
||
alcohol. I've indicated that the "harmful" effects of marijuana
|
||
mentioned in the literature you sent are either myth or
|
||
exaggerated. If there is no rational basis for treating
|
||
marijuana differently from the more harmful legal drug, alcohol,
|
||
then what remain.J=UIchoice is to either to begin to research
|
||
this topic on your own and go wherever the facts lead or to
|
||
suppress this unpleasant information and go on as before. I
|
||
offer this caution: if you can ignore the information I've given
|
||
you, it means that you are willing to be treated similarly when
|
||
it is you who are arguing for the truth.
|
||
|
||
Here's another way to evaluate your current position and
|
||
your options. Heath's work is essentially worthless. Why would
|
||
material that has been known to be invalid for at least 8 years
|
||
still be given out to people? How about Nahas' test tube
|
||
studies? Same objection. Do you understand my point? If your
|
||
cause is just, why not pass out accurate information? Would
|
||
accurate information "confuse" the public? Is it possible that
|
||
in the case of marijuana, you are on the wrong side?
|
||
|
||
The proverbial ball is now in your court.
|
||
--
|
||
paul hager hagerp@iuvax.cs.indiana.edu
|
||
|
||
"I would give the Devil benefit of the law for my own safety's sake."
|
||
--from _A_Man_for_All_Seasons_ by Robert Bolt
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
X-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-X
|
||
Another file downloaded from: The NIRVANAnet(tm) Seven
|
||
|
||
& the Temple of the Screaming Electron Taipan Enigma 510/935-5845
|
||
Burn This Flag Zardoz 408/363-9766
|
||
realitycheck Poindexter Fortran 510/527-1662
|
||
Lies Unlimited Mick Freen 801/278-2699
|
||
The New Dork Sublime Biffnix 415/864-DORK
|
||
The Shrine Rif Raf 206/794-6674
|
||
Planet Mirth Simon Jester 510/786-6560
|
||
|
||
"Raw Data for Raw Nerves"
|
||
X-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-X
|