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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
60. The Le Dain
Commission Interim Report (1970)
It is often said
that little is known about the psychological and physical effects of
marijuana on the human user. This is a simple error of fact. In addition
to many hundreds of significant papers reporting marijuana research
through the past century, an impressive series of official investigating
bodies have reviewed all of the available evidence and have presented
their findings at length. The most important of these official marijuana
investigation reports are listed here.
- The
Indian Hemp Drugs Commission Report (1894). This 3,281-page,
seven-volume report, published in Simla, India, in 1893-1894, has
been justly called "the most complete and systematic study of
marijuana undertaken to date." 1
The seven commissioners four of them British and three
of them Indian, including one rajah secured testimony
on every aspect of cannabis use from 1,193 witnesses. A digest of
the findings of the Commission by Dr. Tod H. Mikuriya can be found
in the Spring 1968 issue of the International Journal of
the Addictions. A reprint of the final (Summary) volume, edited
by Professor John Kaplan of the Stanford University Law School, was
published by the Jefferson Press, Silver Springs, Maryland, in 1969.
- The Panama
Canal Zone Military Investigations (1916-1929). A succession of
military boards and commissions inquired into marijuana smoking by
American military personnel stationed in the Canal Zone, beginning
in 1916 and concluding with a full-scale investigation in 1929 under
the chairmanship of Colonel J. F. Siler, M.D., of the Army Medical
Corps. Sitting with him were two lieutenant colonels, a major, a naval
commander, and the chief of the Canal Zone's Board of Health Laboratory.
Colonel Siler and his associates reported the findings of their own
and earlier Canal Zone investigations in the Military Surgeon in 1933
(volume 73, pages 269-280).
- The
LaGuardia Committee Report (1939-1944). In 1939, at the request
of Mayor Fiorello LaGuardia of New York City, the New York Academy
of Medicine established a committee composed of eight physicians,
a psychologist, and four New York City health officials. The committee
studied marijuana smoking both under natural conditions in the city's
"tea pads" and other marijuana centers, and in the laboratory.
Its report was published in 1944, and reprinted in The Marijuana
Papers (Indianapolis: Bobbs-Merrill, 1966). This report is second
only to the Indian Hemp Drugs Commission report in scope and thoroughness,
and explores many areas of interest not considered by the Indian report.
It is of particular contemporary importance because the pattern of
marijuana smoking in New York City in the late 1930s that it describes
was quite similar in many respects to the national pattern of marijuana
smoking today.
- The
Baroness Wootton Report (1968). In April 1967, the Advisory
Committee on Drug Dependence of the United Kingdom Home Office appointed
a subcommittee under Baroness Wootton of Abinger (formerly Barbara
Wootton, a member of the House of Commons) to inquire into marijuana
and hashish use in the United Kingdom. Her eleven fellow members included
several of Britain's most eminent drug authorities. The report of
the subcommittee, published in 1968, confirmed in all substantial
respects the findings of the Indian Hemp Drugs Commission, the Panama
Canal Zone investigations, and the LaGuardia Committee report.
- The
Interim Report of the Canadian Government's Le Dain Commission
(1970). In May 1969, on the recommendation of Minister of National
Health and Welfare John Munro, the Government of Canada appointed
a Commission of Inquiry into the Non-Medical Use of Drugs. The commission
became known as the Le Dain Commission after its chairman, Dean Gerald
Le Dain. The 320-page Interim Report of the commission, published
in April 1970, marked a turning point in official North American thinking
about psychoactive drugs in general and about marijuana
in particular. The commission's Final Report is scheduled for publication
in 1972.
- In 1970
a sixth official body the National
Commission on Marijuana and Drug Abuse was established
by Congress and President Nixon, under the chairmanship of Raymond
P. Schafer, former governor of Pennsylvania. Its initial findings,
scheduled for 1972, were not yet available when this Consumers Union
Report was completed.
In addition to these
official investigations, four outstanding books on marijuana by individual
authorities, and one important symposium, were published in 1970 and
1971. In alphabetical order by author, they are:
- The Marijuana
Smokers, by Erich Goode, associate professor of sociology, State
University of New York at Stony Brook (New York and London: Basic
Books, 1970).
- Marijuana
Reconsidered, by Lester Grinspoon, M.D., then associate clinical
professor of psychiatry, Harvard Medical School, and director of psychiatry
(research), Massachusetts Mental Health Center (Cambridge, Massachusetts:
Harvard University Press, 1971).
- Marijuana:
The New Prohibition, by Professor John Kaplan of the Stanford
University Law School (New York: Crown, 1970).
- The Strange
Case of Pot, by Michael Schofield, a member of the Baroness Wootton
subcommittee and author of numerous works on psychology (Baltimore:
Penguin Books, 1971).
- The New Social
Drug-Cultural, Medical, and Legal Perspective on Marijuana, edited
by David E. Smith, M.D., medical director of the Haight-Ashbury Medical
Clinic, assistant clinical professor of toxicology at the University
of California San Francisco Medical Center, and editor
of the Journal of Psychedelic Drugs with contributions
by Gilbert Geis, Frederick H. Meyers, Roger C. Smith, Andrew T. Weil,
Norman E. Zinberg, and others (Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey: Prentice-Hall,
1970).
Remarkable as
it may appear, all five of the reports of investigating bodies listed
above, ranging in date from 1894 to 1970, and all of the books listed
are in substantial agreement on substantially all major points of fact.
We have chosen,
accordingly, to summarize and review in some detail only one of these
major studies: the Interim Report of the Le Dain Commission.
This decision was reached on several grounds:
(1) The Le Dain
Commission's Interim Report is the most recent of the
official investigations and therefore takes account of recent research
Dot available for the earlier investigations.
(2) The findings
and conclusions of the Le Dain Commission Interim Report
are a fair sample of the findings and conclusions of the other studies.
(3) The drug scene
in Canada on which the Le Dain Commission focuses is very similar
in many respects to the comparable drug scene in the United States;
and the problems Canada faces are very similar to United States problems.
(4) In our opinion,
the methodology followed by the Le Dain Commission, in collecting
data concerning other drugs as well as marijuana, is a model that
future investigating bodies in the United States might well follow.
(5) Finally, the
marijuana recommendations of the Le Dain Commission's Interim
Report seem to us in many respects directly applicable to United
States conditions.
Four of the five
members of the Canadian Commission of Inquiry brought to their task
a broad experience in public affairs and social problems, but relatively
little knowledge of drug use: Gerald Le Dain, Q.C., Chairman, Dean of
the Osgoode Hall Law School, York University, Toronto; Marie-Andree
Bertrand, Associate Professor of Criminology, University of Montreal;
Ian L. Campbell, Dean of Arts, Sir George Williams University, Montreal;
and J. Peter Stein, social worker, Vancouver.
The fifth member
of the commission, Dr. Heinz E. Lehmann, Clinical Director of the Douglas
Hospital in Montreal, is an internationally known authority on drugs,
a Fellow of the American Psychiatric Association, a past president of
the American College of Neuropsychopharmacology, and the author of more
than 140 medical papers and publications.
Like the Indian
Hemp Drugs Commission three-quarters of a century earlier, the Le Dain
Commission adopted at the outset of its inquiry a "policy of the
open ear." It held twenty-one days of formal hearings in twelve
Canadian cities from coast to coast, traveling some 17,000 miles. Equally
important, the commission listened to young people actually familiar
with the drug scene, including many drug users. For this purpose it
held numerous informal hearings on college and university campuses and
in coffeehouses located near the heart of the drug scene of various
cities (much as an 1884 Royal Commission had held hearings in a British
Columbia opium den). To protect witnesses, an understanding was reached
with the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, Canada's federal police agency,
that appearances and statements "would not be exploited for law
enforcement purposes." 2
In addition, witnesses were permitted to testify anonymously, some of
them in private, and to submit anonymous statements; the press cooperated
by refraining from publishing photographs. In all, the commission estimated,
nearly 12,000 Canadians had attended these formal and informal hearings
up to February 1, 1970.
Opinions and feelings
have poured forth in the hearings with great spontaneity, particularly
in the more informal settings [the Interim Report notes].
The Commission has been deeply impressed, and on several occasions,
moved by the testimony which it has heard. It has been struck by the
depth of feeling which [drug use] and the social response to it have
aroused. As a result of the initial phase of its inquiry, the Commission
is more than ever convinced that the proper response to the non-medical
use of psychotropic drugs is a question which must be worked out by
the people of Canada, examining it and talking it over together. It
goes to the roots of our society and touches the values underlying
our whole approach to life. It is not a matter which can be confined
to the discrete consultation of experts, although experts obviously
have their role, and a very important one, to play. 3
Experts did play
an important role in the Le Dain Commission deliberations. Scores of
eminent Canadian scientists concerned with all aspects of drug use
the biochemical and pharmacological as well as the sociological and
psychological either testified personally or participated
in the preparation of written submissions on behalf of the Royal Canadian
Mounted Police, the Addiction Research Foundation of Ontario, the Narcotic
Addiction Foundation of British Columbia, l'Office de la Prevention
et du Traitement de l'Alcoolisme et des Autres Toxicomanies, numerous
religious groups, and other respected Canadian organizations. Experts
and organizations from the United States also submitted data and opinions;
and members of the commission visited western European countries, consulting
with drug authorities there and examining the European drug scene for
themselves. Thus the inquiry was truly international.
The strictly psychopharmacological
data were coordinated by a staff member specially trained in drug research,
Dr. Ralph D. Miller. Chapter 2 of the Interim Report, entitled
"Drugs and Their Effects," 4
prepared by Dr. Miller with the assistance of Dr. Charles Farmilo, is
one of the most authoritative short statements of drug effects (beneficial
and damaging) available, and is central to the conclusions that the
commission reached.
Despite intensive
American and Canadian law-enforcement efforts, the Le Dain Commission
learned, marijuana smoking has become endemic in Canada
and here it cites high-school, college, and general population surveys
showing levels of use quite comparable to those in the United States,
reviewed above. Also as in the United States, use has spread from the
"youth culture" to older age groups:
The Commission
has... been made aware of what appears to be an extensive and growing
marijuana use by adults. The evidence of such use has come to us largely
from the statements of individuals, many of whom have given private
testimony, and from a large volume of correspondence received at the
Commission's office.... Most were married and on the whole claimed
to have reached an average or above average level of education. The
Commissioners have spoken to physicians, lawyers, bankers, politicians,
teachers, scientists, pilots, business executives and journalists,
to mention only a few, who have smoked marijuana or hashish. Many
of these reported using the drug with colleagues and many expressed
the opinion that the use of these drugs would increase among their
friends and associates. 5
Why do so many young
people smoke marijuana?
In the United States,
a variety of reasons have been suggested:
- The general revolt
of youth in the 1960s against their parents and parental taboos.
- The sense of
"alienation" or of "anomie" among youth in the
1960s.
- The sense of
impending nuclear doom, the draft, the war in Vietnam, and other factors
leading youth to look to the immediate present rather than the future
for satisfactions.
- The widespread
advertising of mind-affecting drugs on radio and television.
- The widespread
use of stimulants, depressants, and tranquilizers by parents.
- Parental and
educational "permissiveness"; progressive education.
- The alleged breakdown
of moral fiber among youth today.
The Le Dain
Commission's Interim Report cites a quite different set
of factors. In this as in other respects, the commission goes far beyond
previous official reports and, largely as a result of its willingness
to listen directly to young people, pioneers new ground. While many
of its findings will come as a surprise and shock to nonsmokers of marijuana,
these findings deserve careful consideration if the contemporary marijuana
explosion is to be understood. "A major factor appears to be the
simple pleasure of the experience," the Le Dain Commission explains.
"Time after time, witnesses have said to us in effect: We do it
for fun. Do not try to find a complicated explanation for it. We do
it for pleasure." 6
This pleasure explanation,
the report adds, is offered not only by college students but also by
adults in the working world.
A mother of four
and a teacher said: "When I smoke grass I do it in the same social
way that I take a glass of wine at dinner or have a drink at a party.
I do not feel that it is one of the great and beautiful experiences
of my life; I simply feel that it is pleasant and I think it ought
to be legalized." 7
A witness directly
involved in work with drug users is quoted in much the same vein:
I think maybe
it is time we stopped all the sociological nonsense about social milieus,
and how your daddy fell off a horse, and how your mommy burnt the
pablum or whatever it is or what kind of sociological
trip you want to blast off on, and just say what you mean which is
"I get loaded because I love to do it." 8
The commission
partially accepts this "we do it for fun" explanation.
We feel it would
be a serious error, at least as far as cannabis use is concerned [the
Interim Report declares] to think of use as symbolic
of or manifesting a pathological, psychological or even sociological
state. Simple pleasure, similar to that claimed for the moderate use
of alcohol, or food, or sex, is frequently offered as the general
explanation for most current drug use. This is particularly true of
the growing number of adult users (who share perhaps little else but
their taste for cannabis with the members of the "hip" culture).
It is no doubt true that for some the use of drugs is a reflection
of personal and social problems. But the desire for certain kinds
of psychological gratification or release is not peculiar to the drug
user or to our generations. It is an old and universal theme of human
history. Man has always sought gratifications of the kind afforded
by the psychotropic drugs. 9
This use of marijuana
for pleasure, the Interim Report continues, must not be
interpreted as meaning that the motivation is trivial. On the contrary,
it is one among many indications that the younger generation has profoundly
reevaluated the proper role of pleasure in human life:
Young people speak
often of a desire to overcome the division of life into work and play,
to achieve a way of life that is less divided, less seemingly schizophrenic:
and more unified. They seem to be talking about the increasingly rare
privilege of work that one can fully enjoy of work that
is like one's play. They claim to be prepared to make considerable
renunciation or sacrifice of traditional satisfactions like status
and material success for work in which they can take pleasure. Indeed,
one of their frequent commentaries on the older generation is that
it does not seem to enjoy its work, that it does not seem to be happy.
This is said sadly, even sympathetically. It is not said contemptuously.
The young say, in effect, "Why should we repeat this pattern?"
The use of drugs for many is part of a largely hedonistic life style
in which happiness and pleasure are taken as self-evidently valid
goals of human life. 10
In addition to this
happiness-and-pleasure motive, however, the Le Dain Commission notes
that a number of young people also cite self-improvement as a reason
for drug use:
In the
case of cannabis, the positive points which are claimed
for it include the following: it is a relaxant; it is disinhibiting;
it increases self-confidence and the feeling of creativity (whether
justified by objective results or not); it increases sensual awareness
and appreciation; it facilitates concentration and gives one a greater
sense of control over time; it facilitates self-acceptance and in this
way makes it easier to accept others; it serves a sacramental function
in promoting a sense of spiritual community among users; it is a shared
pleasure; because it is illicit and the object of strong disapproval
from those who are, by and large opposed to social change, it is a symbol
of protest and a means of strengthening the sense of identity among
those who are strongly critical of certain aspects of our society and
value structure today. 11
In these respects,
the Interim Report adds, marijuana is seen as quite different
from alcohol:
In our
conversation with [students and young people], they have frequently
contrasted marijuana and alcohol effects to describe the former as a
drug of peace, a drug that reduces tendencies to aggression while suggesting
that the latter drug produces hostile, aggressive behavior. Thus marijuana
is seen as particularly appropriate to a generation that emphasizes
peace and is, in many ways, anti-competitive. 12
Feeling this way
about his drug, the report continues, the cannabis user naturally
"seeks to convert others to what he sincerely believes to be
a superior outlook and life style. The smoking of cannabis becomes
a rite of initiation to a new society and value system. These are
aspects of cannabis use, particularly among the younger, more idealistic
members of our society, which merit serious consideration in any attempt
to measure its potential for growth." 13
LSD users, of course, voice these self-improvement and other idealistic
themes with even more fervor than marijuana users.
On the whole,
the Interim Report views these idealistic claims with
some sympathy:
While pleasure,
curiosity, the desire to experiment, and even the sense of adventure,
are dominant motivations in drug use, there is no doubt that a search
for self-knowledge and self-integration and for spiritual meanings
are strong motivations with many. 14
The Interim
Report notes that drug use is not indispensable for achieving these
new insights, and that it may in some cases be only a temporary stage
in reaching fresh insight:
Some people are
fortunate enough to be what users call a natural "turn on".
It is conceded that you can be "turned on" without drugs
vital, human, and aware of all your senses, enjoying authentic, non-exploitative
human relations, and alive to beauty and the possibilities of the
moment. Indeed, there is an active doctrine of transcendence which
sees drug use as a catalytic or transitional thing to be abandoned
as soon as it has enabled you to glimpse another way of looking at
things and of relating to life and people. The doctrine of transcendence
carries much hope for the future. One witness said: "I don't
do too many drugs anymore because I have gone beyond them. They have
taught me the lesson and there isn't so much need for them anymore.
I mean it's still fun to get stoned but there's a lot more to it.
There is more to it than just fun. After you have learned the lesson,
you have fun in virtually anything." 15
Many former
drug users, the Le Dain Commission continues,
have stated that
the insights gained through drug use have carried over and remained
with them.... In listening to these statements one cannot help feeling
that this discovery was often made in other ways in the past
through traditional religious experiences, for instance.
Modern drug use
would definitely seem to be related in some measure to the collapse
of religious values the ability to find a religious meaning
of life. The positive values that young people claim to find in the
drug experience bear a striking similarity to traditional religious
values, including the concern with the soul, or inner self. The spirit
of renunciation, the emphasis on openness and the closely knit community,
are part of it, but there is definitely the sense of identification
with something larger, something to which one belongs as part of the
human race. 16
Against this background,
it is hardly surprising that the Le Dain Commission opposes the imprisonment
of young people for the possession or use of marijuana. It is in exploring
a wide range of alternatives to suppression and imprisonment that the
commission makes its second major contribution to a reasonable consideration
of marijuana.
We see
non-medical drug use generally, [the commission states] as presenting
a complex social challenge for which we must find a wise and effective
range of social responses. We believe that we must explore the full
range of possible responses, including research, information and education;
legislation and administrative regulation; treatment and supportive
services; personal and corporate responsibility and self-restraint;
and generally individual and social efforts to correct the deficiencies
in our personal relations and social conditions which encourage the
non-medical use of drugs. We attach importance to the general emphasis
in this range of social responses. We believe that this emphasis must
shift, as we develop and strengthen the non-coercive aspects of our
social response, from a reliance on suppression to a reliance on the
wise exercise of freedom of choice. 17
As a first
step toward improving the social response to the nonmedical use of drugs,
the Interim Report suggests, society must abandon the transparent
pretense that it considers all such use of drugs as ipso facto and per
se evil and in need of suppression. This pretense is no longer tenable:
Alcohol
is a sedative which is widely used for the relief of tension. Have we
taken a strong moral position against its use? Some have done so and
still do, but they are obviously in a minority, and the vast majority
of the society pays little attention to them. As for the stimulants,
we take in enormous quantities of caffeine and nicotine. We stimulate
our systems and modify our mood by cup after cup of coffee through the
day. The nicotine in tobacco is clearly a psychotropic drug used to
modify one's mood. Have we adopted a moral position against the use
of caffeine and nicotine? Hardly. We are beginning to react against
tobacco because of its clear danger to health, but the effect on sales
is so far unimpressive. 18
In place of
the pretense that the alcohol, caffeine, and nicotine one generation
uses are nondrugs while the marijuana its children use is evil, the
Interim Report recommends that each drug be judged on its
merits: "The extent to which any particular drug use is
to be deemed to be undesirable will depend upon its relative potential
for harm, both personal and social." 19
Against this background,
the Le Dain Commission reviews the allegations traditionally made against
marijuana, and reaches conclusions generally similar to those reached
by the Indian Hemp Drugs Commission, the Panama investigating committees,
the LaGuardia Committee, the Wootton Subcommittee, and other responsible
bodies which have critically reviewed the evidence. It concludes, for
example, that marijuana is not an addicting drug. Users do not develop
tolerance in the classical sense the kind of tolerance that
leads to increasing the dosage. The Commission takes note, however,
of the statements of some users "that if they stay 'high' for several
days in a row the drug experience loses much of its freshness and clarity
and, consequently, they prefer intermittent use. 20
Whether or not this is a tolerance effect, it is clearly a beneficent
one.
Physical dependence
on marijuana, the report adds, has not been demonstrated; "it would
appear that there are normally no adverse physiological effects or withdrawal
symptoms occurring with abstinence from the drug, even in regular users."
21 Reports to the contrary
from the East are suspect. "Since hashish is smoked with large
quantities of tobacco and other drugs in many Eastern countries, these
mixtures could be responsible for the minor symptoms reported."
22 Marijuana, it is true, may
in some cases produce psychological dependence
but "psychological dependence may be said to exist with respect
to anything which is part of one's preferred way of life. In our society,
this kind of dependency occurs regularly with respect to such things
as television, music, books, religion, sex, money, favourite foods,
certain drugs, hobbies, sports or games and, often, other persons. Some
degree of psychological dependence is, in this sense, a general and
normal psychological condition." 23
The short-term physiological
effects of marijuana use, the report continues, "are usually slight
and apparently have little clinical significance." 24
Even overdose produces little acute physiological toxicity; "sleep
is the usual somatic consequence of overdose. No deaths due directly
to smoking or eating cannabis have been documented." 25
The stepping-stone theory that marijuana use leads to heroin use is
stated but given little credence. "In Canada... it appears that
heavy use of sedatives (alcohol and barbiturates) rather than cannabis
has most frequently preceded heroin Use." 26
And 'again: "Persons dependent on opiate narcotics generally have
a history of heavy alcohol consumption." 27
The same, as noted in Part I of this Consumers Union Report, is true
in the United States.
The commission takes
notice of the fear that marijuana smoking, like cigarette smoking, might
lead to lung cancer and other lung pathology. No evidence currently
exists, it points out, to support this view. Moreover, "the quantity
of leaf consumed by the average cigarette smoker in North America is
many times the amount of cannabis smoked by even heavy users. The present
pattern of use by regular cannabis smokers in North America is more
analogous to intermittent alcohol use (e.g., once or twice a week),
than to the picture of chronic daily use presented by ordinary tobacco
dependence." 28 The commission
adds, however, that "the deep inhalation technique usually used
with cannabis might add respiratory complications." 29
With respect
to psychoses and other adverse psychological effects associated with
marijuana, the Le Dain Commission report is on the whole quite reassuring.
"Although there are some well documented examples of very intense
and nightmarish short-term reactions (usually among inexperienced users
in unpleasant situations and with high doses), these cases seem to be
relatively rare and generally show a rapid recovery. Although many regular
users have had an experience with cannabis which was in some way unpleasant,
'freak-outs' are apparently rare." 30
A Montreal psychiatrist of broad experience with adverse reactions to
other drugs, Dr. J. R. Unwin, is quoted as reporting in the Canadian
Medical Association Journal in 1969: I have seen only three adverse
reactions in the past two years; all following the smoking of large
amounts of hashish and all occurring in individuals with a previous
history of psychiatric treatment for psychiatric or borderline conditions."
31
The United States
experience, the commission notes, has in general been similar. Thus
Dr. David E. Smith of the Haight-Ashbury Clinic in San Francisco is
cited as reporting that he had not observed any cases of "cannabis
psychosis" among the 35,000 marijuana users attending that clinic.
32
True, the commission
adds, there are some reports pointing in the other direction. But reports
from the Eastern countries are of dubious value, since no control groups
were studied; the question is not whether some marijuana smokers (like
some nonsmokers) develop psychoses, but whether the use of marijuana
increases the incidence of psychoses. Dr. J. T. Ungerleider
(later appointed a member of President Nixon's National Commission on
Marijuana and Drug Abuse) reported observing 1,887 "adverse reactions"
to marijuana in Los Angeles but... these data are difficult
to interpret since no clear definition of adverse reaction is provided
and no follow-ups were made." * 34
A few psychoses reported among United States forces in Vietnam may or
may not have been traceable to cannabis use; they involved "individuals
who have consumed large doses of potent material under conditions of
increased physical and psychological stress." 35
It is hardly necessary to invoke marijuana as an explanation for a few
psychoses among soldiers billeted in a distant land and fighting on
foreign fields. To the extent that psychoses do occur on rare occasions
following cannabis use, they appear to be "a reflection of very
special personality difficulties in the subjects involved or exceptional
dose levels." 36
* Other Los
Angeles observers have failed to confirm the Ungerleider findings.
Thus Dr. George D. Lundberg, associate professor of pathology at
the University of Southern California School of Medicine, and two
colleagues, with the aid of a computer, searched the records of
701,057 consecutive admissions to the Los Angeles County-University
of Southern California Medical Center from July 1, 1961, to January
1, 1969. Nine admissions involved marijuana, "Total marijuana
users in the region served by this hospital during this time period
arc estimated to be in the hundreds of thousands, with tens of thousands
of frequent or chronic users." Of the nine admissions, three
were marijuana smokers, who experienced "mild illnesses...
transient euphoria, a dream state, dizziness, confusion, and hallucinations."
Two patients recovered rapidly. "The third later was diagnosed
as a chronic paranoid schizophrenic, a state which preceded his
marijuana-induced hospitalization." Another patient ingested
"a 'handful of marijuana leaves,' which produced drowsiness
and headache with recovery following intravenously given fluid and
cathartic therapy." Five patients had "mainlined"
marijuana four a seed extract and the fifth a leaf "juice";
they became acutely ill with "nausea, vomiting, fever, chills,
shock, tachycardia [rapid heartbeat], weakness, headache,"
and an increase in white blood cells; all recovered following the
"intravenous administration of fluids, antibiotics, and steroids....
a variety of comparative studies indicated that hospital admissions
due to alcohol, tobacco, barbiturates, amphetamines, tranquilizers,
and certain nonprescription drugs (all legal) were much more frequent
and the cases much more serious medically...." 33
The Canadian report
also notes two public-health considerations that have generally been
lost from sight in the American antimarijuana literature. The first
concerns the somewhat greater hazard of eating marijuana and hashish
as compared with smoking them. "'Grass' and 'hash' are generally
used interchangeably and great variations in potency of different samples
are accommodated by the experienced user through a 'titration' of dose
i.e., intake is stopped when the smoker reaches a personally comfortable
level of intoxication. Such precision is generally not possible with
oral use, however, due to the long delay in action, and a 'non-optimal'
effect is much more likely to occur with this practice." 37
In the United States this message rarely gets through to young people
primarily because the channels of public-health communication are overloaded
with generalized antimarijuana propaganda, much of it unreliable and
counterproductive.
The second public-health
consideration noted in the Canadian report concerns the relative hazards
of marijuana and hashish. As has already been noted, the two are related
much as beer or wine is related to whisky or gin; the effects of equivalent
doses are rather similar, but it is somewhat easier to overdose with
whisky, gin, or hashish than with beer, wine, or marijuana. While a
prudent and experienced cannabis smoker can limit his hashish "high"
to the level of his customary marijuana "high," the Interim
Report cautiously suggests the possibility that a nationwide conversion
from marijuana to hashish might significantly increase the incidence
of deleterious effects. "Moderate use of the milder forms is one
thing; excessive use of the stronger forms may be quite another."
38
In this context,
the American and Canadian trend from marijuana toward hashish, beginning
in 1969, was naturally a cause of concern for the Le Dain Commission.
It attributes this trend in considerable part to American law-enforcement
policies:
The [Royal
Canadian Mounted] Police representatives of the Department of justice,
and a number of witnesses have reported that marijuana, long the staple
of the drug-using subculture, is now being replaced by hashish as the
widely used illegal drug in some parts of the country. This shift in
popularity can probably be attributed to a growing difficulty in obtaining
marijuana (American and Mexican authorities lately have been intensifying
their efforts to control its cultivation and prevent smuggling activities),
the greater ease with which hashish, a concentrated form of cannabis,
can be hidden and thus transported, and the greater profits in hashish
trafficking. Hashish can be purchased at its source for around $50 a
kilo and resold in Canada at $1,400 a kilo, while marijuana costs from
$20 a kilo in Mexico to $100 a kilo in Southern California and can be
resold in Canada for about $300 a kilo; an ounce of hashish sells for
between $75 and $100 in contrast to about $20 an ounce for marijuana.
39
As marijuana
repression becomes more efficient, of course, the cost of marijuana
rises and the relative competitive advantages of smuggling hashish instead
become even greater.
The Le Dain
Commission does not conclude that marijuana is harmless.
The available evidence, it indicates, warrants a cautious approach.
Additional problems may arise as marijuana research proceeds and as
experience accumulates. Even so, the commission points out, reliance
on the "hazards" theme to curb marijuana, smoking has proved
fruitless or worse in the past and is unlikely to prove more effective
in the future.
"Many of the
young people who have appeared before us have been critical of the drug
education to which they have been exposed," the Interim
Report notes. "In particular, they have said that the attempts
to use 'scare tactics' have 'backfired' and destroyed the credibility
of sound information." 40
The commission itself fully endorses these complaints from its young
witnesses:
The
conclusion we draw from the testimony we have heard is that it is a
grave error to indulge in deliberate distortion or exaggeration concerning
the alleged dangers of a particular drug, or to base a program of drug
education upon a strategy of fear. It is no use playing "chicken"
with young people; in nine cases out of ten they will accept the challenge.
41
In place of
the traditional deterrents to drug use imprisonment and
scare campaigns the Le Dain Commission's Interim
Report then proceeds to outline in the broadest terms, yet with
many detailed recommendations, a major reorientation of attitudes toward
the nonmedical use of psychoactive drugs, and major changes in laws
and public policies. Many of these recommendations apply to the opiates,
the amphetamines, the barbiturates, LSD, and other psychoactive drugs
as well as to marijuana, and they closely parallel suggestions to be
made in Part X, Conclusions and Recommendations, of this Consumers Union
Report; they will therefore be noted there. The Le Dain Commission's
comments on some of the special problems of marijuana legislation and
marijuana law enforcement closely parallel comments in the Wootton subcommittee
report and other recent publications, and are considered here.
The victim
of a crime against person or property [the Commission points out] usually
complains to the police, gives them information, and assists them to
commence an investigation. The police react to what they have been told
about a specific offense. If, on the other hand, someone has a drug
in his possession, and has bought it from someone else, it is rare that
anyone will feel affected enough to lay a complaint. Hence, instead
of reacting to a specific request, the police must go out themselves
and look for offenses. Moreover, it is difficult to discover these offenses.
Because the parties to the offense or transaction are all willing participants,
they can agree to carry out the prohibited conduct in a place of privacy
where it is not likely to be seen either by witnesses or the police.
42
Legislators,
the report continues, have responded to these special drug law enforcement
difficulties by widening police powers of search and seizure in extraordinary
ways. "Under the ordinary law, a person can be searched only after
an arrest has been made, and in order to discover any evidence of the
crime for which the arrest is made. Where there is not an arrest, there
is no power to search premises without a search warrant. Again, such
warrants assume specific evidence that the particular premises contain
something incriminating. The point of these rules is to prevent indiscriminate
interference with privacy in an attempt to turn up evidence of a crime
and to prevent such interference by requiring cogent evidence that the
person or premises affected are peculiarly worthy of search, before
such search is authorized by an independent judicial officer who reviews
the evidence." 43
Under the Canadian
drug laws, in contrast, "there is no longer a real requirement
that the police obtain external review and confirmation of their judgment....
Any police officer can enter and search any place other than a dwelling
house without a warrant. 44
Even with respect
to dwelling houses, moreover, Canadian drug law since 1929 has made
available a legal device called a "writ of assistance." Such
writs, as most United States schoolchildren learn in an early grade,
were one of the causes of the American Revolution. An enforcement officer
must apply to a judge for such a writ in the first instance, as in the
case of a search warrant or warrant for arrest; but the writ of assistance
does not specify any particular premises. "It remains valid so
long as the officer retains his authority and it empowers him to enter
any dwelling in Canada at any time, with such assistance as he may require,
and search for narcotics and other proscribed drugs." 45
Canadian drug law
has also had a "no-knock" clause like the one enacted by the
United States Congress in 1970; this clause provides that a peace officer
armed with either a warrant or a writ of assistance may, "with
such assistance as he deems necessary, break open any door, window,
lock, fastener, floor, wall, ceiling, compartment, plumbing, box, container
or any other thing," 46
may search any person found in such a place; and may seize and take
away any narcotic or other proscribed drug in such place, as well as
anything that may be evidence of the commission of a drug offense. (The
possession of such extraordinary powers has not made the Canadian police
forces noticeably more effective than American police forces in stamping
out illicit drug trafficking.)
The difficulties
of drug-law enforcement, the Le Dain Commission adds, have led to yet
another "unusual practice what is known in other jurisdictions
as 'entrapment' but which may be described as 'police encouragement.'
A person is encouraged by a police agent to commit an offense [and is
then prosecuted for that offense]. It is impossible to say how extensive
this practice is, but it is reflected in a number of cases." 47
Many people approve such laws and practices, of course, on the ground
that the "drug evil" must be stamped out at any cost. The
Le Dain Commission points out that the cost is very high:
During
the initial phase of our inquiry, we have heard bitter complaints and
criticisms of the use of entrapment and physical violence to obtain
evidence. We have not verified the particular circumstances of these
complaints and criticisms, so that we make no charge of any kind at
this time but we deplore the use of such methods to the extent that
they may be resorted to on occasion. We believe that such methods are
not only a serious violation of respect for the human person, but they
are counter-productive in that they create contempt for law and law
enforcement. The price that is paid for them is far too great for any
good that they may do.
We recommend
that instructions be given to police officers to abstain from such
methods of enforcement, and that the RCMP use its influence with other
police forces involved in the enforcement of the drug laws to try
to assure that there is a uniform policy in this regard. 48
[The emphasis here and in the quotations below is in the original.]
The commission reviews
the arguments in favor of legalizing marijuana, and indicates that serious
consideration should be given to them. They are summarized in the Interim
Report as follows:
1. The
use of marijuana is increasing in popularity among all age groups of
the population, and particularly among the young;
2. This increase
indicates that the attempt to suppress, or even to control its use,
is failing and will continue to fail that people are not
deterred by the criminal law prohibition against its use;
3. The present
legislative policy has not been justified by clear and unequivocal
evidence of short term or long term harm caused by cannabis;
4. The individual
and social harm (including the destruction of young lives and growing
disrespect for law) caused by the present use of the criminal law
to attempt to suppress cannabis far outweighs any potential for harm
which cannabis could conceivably possess, having regard to the long
history of its use and the present lack of evidence;
5. The illicit
status of cannabis invites exploitation by criminal elements, and
other abuses such as adulteration; it also brings cannabis users into
contact with such criminal elements and with other drugs, such as
heroin, which they might not otherwise be induced to consider.
For all of these
reasons, it is said, cannabis should be made available under government-controlled
conditions of quality and availability. 49
The commission
concludes, however, that legalization is not warranted at this
time (spring of 1970). One reason for postponing the decision is
that the scientific evidence concerning marijuana is not yet all in
but the Interim Report adds a cogent warning:
"How
long can society wait for the necessary information? It is very serious
that the scientific information concerning cannabis lags so far behind
the rapidly developing social problem caused by its illegal status."
50
One reason for this
lag in scientific information, the commission notes, is government restraints
pn research. "Many scientists interested in such research have
expressed feelings of dissatisfaction and frustration with governmental
research policy. They have stated to the commission that they have been
unable to carry out such work under their own authority as scientists
in the present atmosphere of restraint. They say that they have been
frustrated by the administration of the formal and unwritten governmental
policies which surround the right to undertake research in this field.
51
Many American scientists,
of course, have expressed similar dissatisfaction and frustration.*
One reason for this governmental repression of research, the Le Dain
Commission suggests (though it does not actually state) is the fear
that sound research may fail to support the traditional allegations
against marijuana and may thus lead to a change in public policy. "The
public, including interested scientists, are justly dissatisfied and
impatient with the present state of research. The public does not know
whom to blame, but it will not lightly tolerate an indefinite reliance
on inadequate knowledge to justify a social policy which is coming under
increasingly severe criticism." 53
(Emphasis added.)
* An
example of the perils of marijuana research in the United States
was reported in Medical World News in 1969:
"At ten
minutes before midnight last June 27, [a psychiatrist] was rousted
out of bed... by callers from the narcotics division of the Texas
Department of Public Safety and the local police, callers armed
with a warrant for the psychiatrist's arrest on a charge of marijuana
possession and for a search of his home.
"[The
psychiatrist] informed them that he did, indeed, have marijuana
in his possession, not in his residence but in his adjoining office,
where he used it in fully authorized research. He removed it from
his office safe and turned it over to the officers, who confiscated
it and arrested him. They also seized 208 Cannabis sativa
plants the doctor showed them growing in his backyard.
"But
he also showed them his permit to import marijuana, his Class
4 and Class 5 federal tax stamps covering marijuana used in research,
and the paragraph in a booklet issued by the federal bureau of
narcotics stating that Class 5 researchers may produce such quantities
of marijuana and compound or manufactured marijuana preparations
as are necessary for their research, instruction, or analysis.'
[The psychiatrist] was nevertheless arrested, spent the night
in the [county] jail and was released the next morning on $1,000
bond.
"Although
it appeared unlikely that he would be prosecuted, [the psychiatrist]
considers his research to have been effectively stopped, and himself
to have been all but run out of town. 'My patients have been scared
away,' he says, 'and my experimental subjects are afraid to come
in because it was reported in the local papers that I was under
surveillance for a month and that the police are watching me with
binoculars." 52
A second reason
given by the Le Dain Commission for not recommending the immediate legalization
of marijuana was a purely practical one: public opinion was not yet
ready (in the spring of 1970) for so drastic a change, and the recommendation
would no doubt be rejected.... It is our impression that there has not
yet been enough informed public debate. Certainly there has been much
debate, but all too often it has been based on hearsay, myth and ill-informed
opinion about the effects of the drug. We hope that this report will
assist in providing a basis for informed debate..." 54
A third reason for
delaying the legalization decision, the Interim Report
adds, is that "further consideration should be given to what may
be necessarily implied by legalization. Would a decision by the government
to assume responsibility for the quality control and distribution of
cannabis imply, or be taken to imply, approval of its use * and an assurance
as to the absence of significant potential harm?" 55
Finally, the commission cites "jurisdictional and technical questions
involved in the control of quality and availability." 56
* In other situations,
it should be noted, the repeal of a punitive law does not imply
official approval of the behavior that is legalized. Thus the New
York state legislature years ago repealed that state's law punishing
suicide attempts, a number of state legislatures have in the past
few years repealed state laws against homosexual acts between consenting
adults, and the Oregon legislature in 1971 repealed that state's
law restricting cigarette smoking by minors not because
the legislatures approved or wanted to encourage suicide attempts,
homosexual acts, and cigarette smoking by minors, or because they
thought such acts harmless, but because they recognized that criminal
penalties are an unwise and ineffective response to such acts.
Both in the United
States and Canada, the argument is sometimes made that international
treaty obligations under the United Nations Single Convention
on Narcotics Drugs, 1961, prevent the legalization of marijuana.
The Le Dain Commission gives short shrift to this argument. Any country
can withdraw from the Single Convention on January 1 of any year by
giving six full months' notice; withdrawal "would not, of course,
be in violation of international obligations since it is a right expressly
provided for in the Convention." 57
One step short of
legalizing marijuana would be the abolition of all penalties for the
possession of marijuana leaving trafficking
a criminal offense. The Interim Report concludes that this
policy merits conscientious study, with respect not only to marijuana
but to the psychoactive drugs in general, including heroin.
One Le Dain Commission
argument in favor of abolishing the offense of simple possession is
the high cost of enforcing the possession law: "Its enforcement
would appear to cost far too much, in individual and social terms, for
any utility which it may be shown to have.... The present cost of its
enforcement, and the individual and social harm caused by it, are in
our opinion, one of the major problems involved in the nonmedical use
of drugs." 58
Unenforceability,
the commission continues, is another argument in favor of abolishing
all penalties against possession. "Insofar as cannabis, and possibly
the stronger hallucinogens like LSD, are concerned, the present law
against simple possession would appear to be unenforceable, except in
a very selective and discriminatory kind of way. This results necessarily
from the extent of use and the kinds of individual involved. It is obvious
that the police can not maker a serious attempt at full enforcement
of the law against simple possession. _..." 59
It is often argued
that, just as the continued commission of murder is not a sound reason
for repealing the murder laws, so the smoking of marijuana is not a
good reason for repealing the marijuana laws. The Le Dain Commission
distinguishes the two cases:
The law
which appears to stand on the statute book as a mere convenience to
be applied from time to time, on a very selective and discriminatory
basis, to "make an example" of someone, is bound to create
a strong sense of injustice and a corresponding disrespect for law and
law enforcement. It is also bound to have an adverse effect upon the
morale of law enforcement authorities.
Moreover, it is
doubtful if its deterrent effect justifies the injury inflicted upon
the individuals who have the misfortune to be prosecuted under it.
It is, of course, impossible to determine the extent to which the
law against simple possession has deterrent effect, but certainly
the increase in use, as well as the statements of users, would suggest
that it has relatively little. The relative risk of detection and
prosecution may be presumed to have a bearing upon deterrent effect.
60
The likelihood that
a marijuana user will be brought to court for possession, the commission
adds, "may be under one percent" 61
hardly an effective deterrent. *
* In the United
States, where an estimated five million marijuana cigarettes were
smoked daily in 1971, the likelihood of being arrested on any particular
occasion of use was far less than one chance in five thousand
and for many users the risk approached zero.
On the question
of deterrence the Interim Report also cites a 1967 opinion
of the Ontario Court of Appeal: "Those, of whom the accused is
one, who have accepted the use of psychedelic drugs as socially desirable
as well as personally desirable course of conduct are not as likely
to be discouraged by the type of punishment ordinarily meted out to
other traffickers. Such treatment will likely serve to confirm them
in their belief in the drug cult... 62
Yet another reason
for repealing the possession laws is briefly stated in the Interim
Report: "The extreme methods which appear to be necessary in
the enforcement of a prohibition against simple possession
informers, entrapment, Writs of Assistance, and occasionally force to
recover the prohibited substance add considerably to the
burden of justifying the necessity or even the utility of such a provision."
63
But the Le Dain
Commission waxes most eloquent in attacking the possession laws on the
ground of the direct harm they do, not only to their victims but to
respect for law and order:
The harm caused
by a conviction for simple possession appears to be out of all proportion
to any good it is likely to achieve in relation to the phenomenon
of nonmedical drug use. Because of the nature of the phenomenon involved,
it is bound to impinge more heavily on the young than on other segments
of the population. Moreover, it is bound to blight the life of some
of the most promising of the country's youth. Once again there is
the accumulating social cost of a profound sense of injustice, not
only at being the unlucky one whom the authorities have decided to
prosecute, but at having to pay such an enormous price for conduct
which does not seem to concern anyone but oneself. This sense of injustice
is aggravated by the disparity in sentences made possible by the large
discretion presently left to the courts. 64
Despite these
impressive reasons for repealing the laws against mere possession of
marijuana and other psychoactive drugs, a majority of the commission
resolved not to recommend immediate repeal. More time was
needed, the majority concluded, to study arguments against
repeal made by the police. The commission indicated, however, that it
would announce a decision in 1972.
This was the only
point on which the Interim Report was not unanimous. The
one woman member of the Le Dain Commission, Professor Bertrand, did
not want to postpone the repeal recommendation even for one year. She
wrote:
I find
myself in disagreement with my colleagues on the Commission in respect
of the offence of simple possession of cannabis. In my opinion the prohibition
against such possession should be removed altogether. I believe that
this course is dictated at the present time by the following considerations:
the extent of use and the age groups involved; the relative impossibility
of enforcing the law; the social consequences of its enforcement; and
the uncertainty as to the relative potential for harm of cannabis. 65
In lieu of recommending
immediate repeal of the laws against simple possession, the Le Dain
Commission majority recommended the immediate abolition of imprisonment
as a penalty for simple possession:
...
The Commission is of the opinion that no one should be liable for imprisonment
for simple possession of a psychotropic drug for non-medical purposes.
* 66
* This recommendation,
the commission made clear, applies to simple possession of heroin
and other illicit drugs as well as to marijuana.
To replace imprisonment
the commission recommended "as an interim measure, pending
its final report, that the Narcotic Control Act and the Food and Drugs
Act be amended to make the offense of simple possession under these
acts punishable upon summary conviction by a fine not exceeding a reasonable
amount. The Commission suggests a maximum fine of $100." 67
A prisoner who cannot
pay his fine or who refuses to pay it is ordinarily liable to imprisonment.
To prevent imprisonment in such cases, the commission "also
recommends that the power... to impose imprisonment in default of payment
of a fine should not be exercisable in respect of offenses of simple
possession of psychotropic drugs. In such cases, the Crown should reply
on civil proceedings to recover payment." 68
The proposal that
offenders found guilty of possessing marijuana should not be imprisoned
may seem radical indeed to some readers of this Consumers Union Report.
But, as the Le Dain Commission points out, the courts of Canada had
reached much the same conclusion on their own initiative in 1969, without
waiting for the Interim Report. Canadian court statistics
for the period from August through December 1969, this report declares,
"reveal that imprisonment is now being rarely, if at all, resorted
to in cases of simple possession of marijuana and hashish and, it would
appear, LSD, and that such cases are now generally disposed of by suspended
sentence, probation or fine." 69
Thus the key Le Dain Commission marijuana recommendation, far from representing
a radical departure from current Canadian policy, does little more than
recommend that the current practice of most Canadian courts be made
uniform and mandatory.
Much the same trend
appears to be under way in the United States courts, though at a slower
pace. As the Select Committee on Crime of the United States House of
Representatives commented in its First Report on Marijuana,
dated April 6, 1970: "We have observed that the penalties for marijuana
possession or even for selling are generally not imposed and that jail
sentences are the rare exception rather than the rule." * 72
* Judge Charles
W. Halleck of the District of Columbia Court of General Sessions,
in testimony before the House of Representatives Special Subcommittee
on Alcoholism and Narcotics on September 18, 1969, explained why
he no longer gives jail sentences to youthful marijuana smokers:
"If I
send [a long-haired marijuana offender] to the jail even for 30
days, Senator, he is going to be the victim of the most brutal
type of homosexual, unnatural, perverted assaults and attacks
that you can imagine, and anybody who tells you it doesn't happen
in that jail day in and day out, is simply not telling you the
truth....
"How
in God's name, Senator, can I send anybody to that jail knowing
that? How can I send some poor young kid who gets caught by some
zealous policeman who wants to make his record on a narcotics
arrest? How can I send that kid to that jail?
"I can't
do it. So I put him on probation or I suspend the sentence and
everybody says the judge doesn't care. The judge doesn't care
about drugs, lets them all go. You just simply can't treat these
kinds of people like that." 70
Dr. David E.
Smith of the Haight-Ashbury Medical Clinic reported in June 1971
that among the psychiatric patients served by his clinic were 25
young men with serious psychoses all of whom were imprisoned
for possession of marijuana and all of whom suffered psychiatric
breakdowns following homosexual rape while they were incarcerated.
71
To reduce without
delay the damaging effects of law enforcement on drug users, the Le
Dain Commission went on to recommend "that the police,
prosecutors and courts exercise the discretion entrusted to them at
various stages of the criminal law process so as to minimize the impact
of the criminal law upon the simple possessor of psychotropic drugs,
pending decision as to the whole future of possessional offenses in
this field." 73
The commission also
recommended a substantial reduction in the penalties for trafficking
and for possession for the purpose of trafficking and a major restriction
of the definition of "trafficking." Canadian penalties at
the time of the Interim Report included a maximum of life
imprisonment for either trafficking in marijuana or possession for the
purpose of trafficking. This maximum could be meted out to a young person
sharing a marijuana cigarette with a friend or giving marijuana to a
friend a gift defined as "trafficking" in Canadian
law and as a sale" in United States law.
In Canada, importers
and exporters of cannabis were also subject to a maximum of life imprisonment
and to a minimum mandatory sentence, which the judge could not reduce,
of seven years' imprisonment. In lieu of these penalties, the Le Dain
Commission recommended that minimum mandatory sentences be abolished
altogether and that the maximum, sentence be eighteen months for all
cannabis offenses including importing, exporting, and trafficking. "We
further recommend that the definition of trafficking be amended so as
to exclude the giving, without exchange of value, by one user to another
of a quantity of cannabis which could reasonably be consumed on a single
occasion. Such an act should be subject at most to the penalty for simple
possession" 74
that is, a reasonable fine not to exceed $100.
In yet another respect
the Le Dain Commission sought to minimize the impact of the criminal
law on young marijuana offenders indeed, on offenders generally:
Great
concern has been expressed during the initial phase of our inquiry concerning
the serious effects of a criminal conviction and record upon the lives
of drug users, particularly the young. These effects are cited, in the
case of cannabis, as indicating that the harm caused by the law exceeds
the harm which it is supposed to prevent. A criminal record may mar
a young life, forever being an impediment to professional or other vocational
opportunity and interfering with free movement and the full enjoyment
of public rights. We believe this reasoning applies to all criminal
convictions, and we do not believe that there should be a special rule
in favour of drug offenders. For this reason, we recommend
the enactment of general legislation to provide for the destruction
of all records of a criminal conviction after a reasonable period of
time. 75
The Final
Report of the Le Dain Commission was not available when this Consumers
Union Report was completed. The guidelines laid down by the commission's
Interim Report, however, are sound guidelines for the formation
of policy in the United States. Consumers Union's own detailed recommendations,
which go considerably further, appear below in Part X.
Footnotes
Chapter 60
1.
Tod H. Mikuriya, "Physical, Mental and Moral Effects of Marijuana,"
International Journal of the Addictions, 3 (Fall, 1968):
253.
2. Le Dain Commission Interim Report,
p. 8.
3. Ibid., p. 7.
4. Ibid., pp. 13-126.
5. Ibid., p. 145.
6. Ibid., p. 154.
7. Ibid., p. 155.
8. Ibid.
9. Ibid., pp. 155-156.
10. Ibid., p. 160.
11. Ibid., p. 156.
12. Ibid., p. 144.
13. Ibid., pp. 156-157.
14. Ibid., p. 157.
15. Ibid., p. 158.
16. Ibid.
17. Ibid., p. 195.
18. Ibid., p. 196.
19. Ibid., p. 197.
20. Ibid., p. 83.
21. Ibid.
22. Ibid.
23. Ibid., p. 26.
24. Ibid., p. 76.
25. Ibid.
26. Ibid., p. 85.
27. Ibid., p. 45.
15771
28. Ibid., p. 77.
29. Ibid.
30. Ibid., p. 79.
31, Ibid.
32. Ibid., p. 80.
33. George D. Lundberg, Janeth Adelson,
and Eric H. Prosnitz, "Marijuana-Induced Hospitalization,"
JAMA, 215 (January 4, 1971): 121.
34. Le Dain Commission Interim Report,
p. 79.
35. Ibid., p. 80.
36. Ibid., p. 203.
37. Ibid., pp. 77-78.
38. Ibid., p. 200.
39. Ibid., p. 146.
40. Ibid., p. 230.
41. Ibid., p. 231.
42. Ibid., p. 183.
43. Ibid.
44. Ibid,
45. Ibid., p. 184.
46. Ibid.
47. Ibid.
48. Ibid., p. 250.
49. Ibid., p. 245.
50. Ibid., p. 247.
51. Ibid., p. 225.
52. Medical World News, September
19, 1969, pp. 15-16.
53. Le Dain Commission Interim Report,
p. 225.
54. Ibid., p. 247.
55. Ibid.
56. Ibid.
57. Ibid., p. 248.
58. Ibid., p. 241,
59. Ibid.
60. Ibid., pp. 241-242.
61. Ibid., p. 241.
62. Ibid., p. 188.
63. Ibid., p. 242.
64. Ibid.
65. Ibid., p. 258.
66. Ibid., p. 242.
67. Ibid.
68. Ibid., p. 243.
69. Ibid., p. 187.
70. Charles W. Halleck, testimony in Comprehensive
Narcotic Addiction and Drug Abuse Care and Control Act of 1969,
Hearings before the Special Subcommittee on Alcoholism and Narcotics
of the Select Committee on Labor and Public Welfare, U.S. Senate, 91st
Cong., 1st Sess., September 18, 1969 (Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government
Printing Office, 1969), pp. 105-106.
71. David E. Smith, "Testimony to
National Commission on Marijuana and Drug Abuse," presented to
National Commission on Marijuana and Drug Abuse, San Francisco, June
14, 1971; unpublished.
72. First Report on Marijuana,
Select Committee on Crime, U.S. House of Representatives, April 6, 1970
(Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1970), p. 114,
73. Le Dain Commission Interim Report, p. 2,43.
74. Ibid., p. 250.
75. Ibid., p. 251.
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