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Social
and Cultural Analyses
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The
Consumers Union Report on Licit and Illicit Drugs
by Edward
M. Brecher and the Editors of Consumer Reports Magazine, 1972
Part VIII -
Marijuana and Hashish
58.
Can marijuana replace alcohol?
Optimists sometimes
argue that the increased popularity of marijuana should be welcomed
and encouraged, since increased marijuana use means a decline in alcohol
consumption and of the evils associated with alcohol drunkenness and
alcoholism (see Part IV). Pessimists maintain that far from supplanting
the evils of alcohol, the evils of marijuana are simply being added
on.
Most of the data
currently available on this point indicate that marijuana smoking tends
to replace alcohol drinking, but some contrary indications have recently
appeared. Let us first review the optimistic evidence.
There are no doubt
some individuals and some small social groups who give up alcohol altogether
after discovering marijuana. Sam Blum supplied details, in the same
New York Times Magazine article 1
cited in Chapter 57. The middle-aged marijuana smoker in the New York
area, he notes, is likely to "use marijuana precisely the way he
previously used alcohol, and there are now middle-aged circles in which
the drinking of liquor has almost disappeared." A forty-year-old
financier told Blum over a glass of nonalcoholic mineral water: "Well,
I can hardly remember the last time I saw a drink at a dinner party.
In fact, I can't remember the last time I had a drink.
"You know,
the homes to which I get invited aren't that remarkable. I'd say they're
upper-middle-class, typical East Side Manhattan, South Shore folks...
but it is a rarity in their homes that I'm not offered pot in beautifully
rolled joints."
A housewife in her
mid-thirties told Blum: "I'd go to parties and hold one drink all
night. I hated the taste of alcohol. And it made me dizzy, and it left
me with a hangover. Marijuana was a godsend. It's much milder than liquor
and much pleasanter, so I carry my own. When everyone else drinks, I
open my cigarette case, pull out a joint; and everyone is very impressed....
But I just smoke enough to get a slight high. I don't really like the
super-boo that takes the top of your head off. I just want to feel more
relaxed, more in the mood for a party. I love it." 2
In 1968, Professor
Alfred R. Lindesmith, Indiana University sociologist, commented: "It
is of incidental interest that some pot smokers, both old and young,
have developed an aversion to alcohol, regarding it as a debasing and
degrading drug, a view which is standard among the Hindus of India where
alcohol is strongly taboo for religious reasons. Some of these people
were heavy users of alcohol before they tried marijuana and feel that
the latter saved them from becoming alcoholics." 3
Professor John Kaplan
of the Stanford University Law School has assembled further evidence
on this point in his 1970 study, Marijuana The
New Prohibition.
"There is already
data," Professor Kaplan points out, "showing that a sizeable
percentage of marijuana users... cut down their alcohol consumption
on taking up their new drug. Thus, Richard Blum's data shows that 54
percent of the regular (weekly) marijuana-users decreased their alcohol
consumption after taking up marijuana, while only two percent increased
their alcohol use. With respect to the daily marijuana-users, the difference
was even more striking. Here eighty-nine percent of the users had decreased
their alcohol consumption.
This type of data
is confirmed from several other sources. Another study at a California
college showed that while in the sample marijuana use had climbed
from nineteen to forty-three percent between 1967 and 1968, use of
alcohol in the "more than once a month" category had fallen
from twenty-nine to fourteen percent, while use in the "more
than several times a month" category had fallen from seventeen
to twelve percent. And one of the most recent surveys, at Stanford
University, showed that, at a time in their lives when students typically
increase their alcohol consumption significantly, only three percent
of the marijuana-users had increased the frequency or quantity of
their hard-liquor consumption while thirty-two percent reported a
decrease. 4
Anecdotal evidence
tends to confirm these findings. In the New York Times
for August 9, 1970, for example, correspondent Frank J. Prial wrote:
In some parts
of the country, marijuana appears to be making inroads on the sale
of liquor. While most tavern owners and liquor salesmen deny that
the [marijuana] joint has replaced the [alcohol] jigger, or ever will,
there are signs of at least a partial trend around the country toward
drugs at the expense of drinks.
A beer distributor
in Denver said that 1966 sales at one college tavern were down 27
percent from a 1967 base. They were also down 53 percent at a second
place near a campus and 71 percent at a third.
Then the Denver
beer distributor added: "Our retailers say they can tell when a
big shipment of marijuana hits town. The [beer] sales go down."
The assistant manager
of an alcohol-dispensing discotheque called Evil People, in Miami, Florida,
was quoted as saying: "Marijuana spells disaster to the liquor
trade. If they ever legalize it, the liquor business is dead."
He contended that if his young patrons could buy marijuana legally,
they "wouldn't touch liquor." 5
Professor Kaplan
also cites Dr. Seymour Halleck, professor of psychiatry at the University
of Wisconsin, as the authority for the view that the evils of marijuana
are not simply being added to the prior evils of alcohol. Dr. Halleck,
after noting in 1968 the rapid increase in marijuana smoking on the
Wisconsin and other campuses, made this comment:
Perhaps the one
major positive effect of the drug [marijuana] is to cut down on the
use of alcohol. In the last few years it is rare for our student infirmary
to encounter a student who has become aggressive, disoriented, or
physically ill because of excessive use of alcohol. Alcoholism has
almost ceased to [be] a problem on our campuses. 6
While those reports
may have quite accurately described the situation in 1968, 1969, and
perhaps even 1970, there is also growing evidence that points in the
opposite direction. just as youthful drug users during the 1960s periodically
discovered marijuana, LSD, the amphetamines, the barbiturates, and other
"new" drugs, so, it seems, they are now discovering yet another
strange intoxicant: alcohol-liquor, beer, and wine. (Wine manufacturers
responded swiftly, and a burgeoning number of low-cost, exotically labeled
wines have become available.) Moreover, marijuana users were said to
be drinking the alcoholic beverages along with smoking
the marijuana joints. One survey even suggested that the heaviest marijuana
smokers were also the heaviest alcohol drinkers. 7
The moral here is
clear. Marijuana can be smoked alone, or it can be smoked along with
the drinking of alcohol. The patterns of use-one drug or a mixture of
two-is not inherent in their chemical molecules but is determined by
a host of legal, social, psychological, and economic factors. A knowledgeable
society, noting a few years ago that some of its members were switching
from alcohol to a less harmful intoxicant, marijuana, might have encouraged
that trend. At the very least, society could have stressed the advantages
of cutting down alcohol consumption if you smoke marijuana. But no such
effort was made here. It may yet not be too late to present that simple
public-health message.
Footnotes
Chapter 58
1. Sam Blum, "Marijuana
Clouds the Generation Cap," New York Times Magazine,
August 23, 1970, pp. 28-30, 45, 48, 55-58.
2. Ibid.
3. Alfred R. Lindesmith, "Student Drug
Use Viewed by a Sociologist," Loyola Conference on Student Use
and Abuse of Drugs, Montreal, October 31-November 3, 1968; unpublished,
p. 43.
4. John Kaplan, Marijuana--- The New Prohibition (New York
and Cleveland: World, 1970), pp. 293-294.
5. New York Times, August 9, 1970.
6. Seymour Halleck, quoted by John Kaplan, Marijuana, p.
294.
7. Hugh J. Parry, personal communication.
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