Eu não gosto do estilo nem das músicas de Lady Gaga, mas fiquei satisfeito em saber que ela pode afinal dar um bom conselho aos jovens: "não fumem maconha". A opinião dela se tornou muito importante nesta semana, depois que Obama declarou que a "maconha não é mais perigosa que o álcool". A opinião de Lady Gaga está no excelente artigo de William Bennett que trabalhou combatendo o tráfico de drogas no goevrno Bush. O artigo foi publicado no site da CNN.
Bennett diz que além de Lady Gaga, familiares de drogados e todos aqueles que vivem perto de bairros de maior presença de drogado também não querem a legalização da maconha. Ele diz que geralmente quem quer liberar vive bem afastado das periferias, em salinhas de ricos.
É um excelente artigo. Leiam:
Even Lady Gaga knows pot is not harmless
January 16, 2014 -- Updated 1918 GMT (0318 HKT)
Editor's note: William J. Bennett is the author of "The Book of Man: Readings on the Path to Manhood."
 He was U.S. secretary of education from 1985 to 1988 and director of 
the Office of National Drug Control Policy under President George H.W. 
Bush.
The issue of marijuana 
legalization was far less prominent than it is today, although even 
then, some argued that we should experiment with legalization. I told 
them not on my watch; the cost to society would be too great.
If you don't want to take my word that it can be harmful, perhaps you'll take Lady Gaga's.
In a recent interview, the world-famous pop star admitted
 she was heavily addicted to marijuana. "I have been addicted to it and 
it's ultimately related to anxiety coping and it's a form of 
self-medication and I was smoking up to 15 or 20 marijuana cigarettes a 
day with no tobacco," she said. "I was living on a totally other 
psychedelic plane, numbing myself completely."
Lady Gaga said she was 
speaking out to bust the myth that marijuana is just a harmless plant. 
"I just want young kids to know that you actually can become addicted to
 it, and there's this sentiment that you can't and that's actually not 
true."
Today a fully functioning
 experiment in legal marijuana for adults is going on in Colorado and 
another one is set to begin later this year in Washington. Supreme Court
 Justice Louis Brandeis once remarked that in our democratic Republic, 
the states are the laboratories of democracy. We are running a few labs 
now and shall see what happens.
But, as with any public 
debate, we need to hear all sides. So far, the advocates of marijuana 
legalization have dominated the public arena. It's certainly had an 
effect. According to a new CNN poll, a majority of Americans support 
legalizing marijuana. But where are the voices of the wounded? Where is 
the outrage from the families who have been hurt?
We know they are out there. More Americans are admitted to treatment facilities for marijuana use than any other illegal drug.
I've talked to parents 
all over the country who lost children to drug abuse -- not to marijuana
 alone; though in many cases it was a gateway drug or part of their 
deadly drug concoction. People have been deeply hurt by drug related 
accidents or spent thousands of dollars on drug rehabilitation. We need 
to hear their voices.
During my tenure as drug
 czar, I traveled to more than 120 communities to see firsthand the 
impact of illegal drugs. Among those visits was a trip to Boston to take
 part in drug busts in some of the city's most broken and dangerous 
neighborhoods. Not once during that visit did a parent or community 
leader advocate for legalization or loosening drug restrictions. Rather,
 they wanted the drugs confiscated and drug dealers locked up. They knew
 the damage drugs had inflicted on their children and communities.
That same evening 
Harvard University held a discussion on drugs and law enforcement. There
 I listened to scores of academics argue for legalizing or 
decriminalizing drugs.
It's hardly an exercise 
in intellectual rigor for those in the middle- and upper-class who live 
in areas with little crime and violence to be willing to experiment with
 drug legalization. They live far removed from the realities of the drug
 trade. But travel to its core, to the slums and projects run by 
ruthless drug dealers, and these intellectuals may rethink their 
position.
It's a myth that 
marijuana, because it is not as harmful as cocaine, heroin or some other
 illegal hard drugs, is safe or safe enough to warrant legalization. 
Opponents contest that marijuana hasn't ravaged communities or that the 
drug itself isn't to blame.
But that's not true. It's ravaged the community of the young.
Marijuana is the most widely used drug in the country, especially among young people. According to the 2012 National Survey on Drug Use and Health,
 "of the 7.3 million persons aged 12 or older classified with illicit 
drug dependence or abuse in 2012, 4.3 million persons had marijuana 
dependence or abuse," making marijuana the drug with the largest number 
of people with dependence or abuse.
The medical community has warned about the danger.
A recent Northwestern University study found
 that marijuana users have abnormal brain structure and poor memory and 
that chronic marijuana abuse may lead to brain changes resembling 
schizophrenia. The study also reported that the younger the person 
starts using marijuana, the worse the effects become.
In its own report 
arguing against marijuana legalization, the American Medical Association
 said: "Heavy cannabis use in adolescence causes persistent impairments 
in neurocognitive performance and IQ, and use is associated with 
increased rates of anxiety, mood and psychotic thought disorders."
The country can 
ill-afford a costly experiment with drugs. While we are undergoing a 
national debate over improving health care costs and education 
performance, legalizing marijuana will undercut those vital missions.
We will wait and see 
what Colorado's and Washington's experiments hold, but I expect that 
after several years, we will see marijuana use rise dramatically, even 
among adolescents. The states will come to regret their decisions.
As the late, great 
political scientist James Q. Wilson remarked, "The central problem with 
legalizing drugs is that it will increase drug consumption" -- and all 
its inherent harm.

 
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