US MD: OPED: Nothing Funny
About Comic Strip Character's Wasted Life
URL: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v02/n141/a02.html
Newshawk: http://www.cannabisnews.com/
Pubdate: Sun, 27 Jan 2002
Source: Baltimore Sun (MD)
Copyright: 2002 The Baltimore Sun, a Times Mirror Newspaper.
Contact: letters@baltsun.com
Website: http://www.sunspot.net/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/37
Authors: Ed Gogek and Jim Gogek
Note: Ed Gogek is a psychiatrist in Arizona. Jim Gogek,
an editorial writer
for The San Diego Union-Tribune, is a Robert Wood Johnson Foundation
fellow
in reducing substance abuse.
Also: We note that the following was printed the same day
this factual
Doonesbury strip was printed in the Sun and hundreds of newspapers
http://www.mapinc.org/image/db012702/
And: the authors have the work history of Zonker totally
wrong - plus much else
http://www.doonesbury.com/strip/thecast/html/zonker.htm
Related: Alert: Doonesbury Comic Strip Carries Message
Newspapers Avoid
http://www.mapinc.org/alert/0229.html
NOTHING FUNNY ABOUT COMIC STRIP CHARACTER'S
WASTED LIFE
You got pretty testy defending marijuana in a recent Doonesbury
comic strip. Over the years, you've made jokes about your
own pot-smoking in several panels, but we think your problem
may be worse than you've let on. We'll put it to you straight,
Zonk: You're in denial.
First of all, you're not a convincing advocate for marijuana
users - you've never held a real job since leaving Walden College
30 years ago. Baking marijuana brownies for cancer patients
this Christmas doesn't count as a real job.
But on Dec. 29, when you dropped your fuzzy, laid-back
smile and angrily argued that marijuana is "a nonaddictive drug
that kills nobody," it heightened our suspicion that you're
a comic strip character hiding a dysfunction. Maybe you're
right that the prohibition against the medical use of marijuana
is ridiculous. But your suggestion that abusing marijuana
is OK because it's not as dangerous as abusing tobacco and alcohol
is equally ridiculous.
Ask anyone who works in addiction treatment if they ever diagnose
cannabis dependence, the psychiatric term for someone who can't
quit smoking marijuana. It's fairly common. There
are a lot of daily pot-smokers who start first thing in the
morning and stay stoned 'round the clock, and many of them can't
quit without the help of addiction treatment. They usually
end up seeing psychiatrists because they suffer from problems
that chronic marijuana use can cause - depression, panic attacks
and, oddly enough, outbursts of uncontrollable rage.
Cannabis addicts are often embarrassed to ask for help because
everyone says marijuana is not addictive. When you repeat
this misinformation in the funnies, you make it harder for marijuana
addicts to get help and easier for occasional users to ignore
the very real risk of addiction.
You're right, Zonker, that alcohol and tobacco are legal, and
in many ways more harmful than marijuana. But so what
if marijuana is less bad? Do we really want another legal drug
to abuse?
Marijuana may not be as addictive or dangerous as cocaine or
alcohol, and it kills fewer people, but that's hardly a selling
point. Should we legalize petty theft because it's not
as bad as grand larceny?
You say marijuana never killed anybody?
A study in The New England Journal of Medicine looked at people
arrested for reckless driving who hadn't been drinking.
One-third of them tested positive for marijuana only, clear
evidence that it impairs driving. For the more than 50,000
people killed in car accidents each year, alcohol is the main
culprit. But if marijuana can cause such a high rate of
reckless driving, it must take its own share of lives.
A study in the Journal of Addictive Diseases found that greater
frequency of marijuana use among inner-city kids was associated
with a greater likelihood to commit violent offenses.
The more we learn about marijuana, the less benign it seems.
Research shows that regular marijuana users have serious life
problems. In school their grades are worse, at work their
thinking is unclear, in relationships they can't communicate.
They have low self-esteem and feel disconnected from friends
and family. They tend to be under-employed in unchallenging
jobs. It's not the violence seen with cocaine and alcohol
addicts, but the loss of a productive life is equally tragic.
Any of this sound familiar, Zonker?
Somebody, maybe Mike himself, needs to tell Garry Trudeau to
stop enabling you. No matter how hard he tries to hide
it, snippets of the painful truth come out - you can't hold
a job, you've never had a relationship, you completely lack
ambition and you still live with your parents when you're not
mooching off B.D. and Boopsie.
We all laughed about it when you smoked a joint in the huddle
at a Walden football game 30 years ago. Back then, most
people thought marijuana was harmless. Today, we know
it's not, so the jokes are wearing thin. Is it wearing
thin with you, Zonk?
For how many years have you actually been suffering, between
panels, from panic, anxiety and social isolation? And now you're
lapsing into denial, rationalizing your own drug abuse by trying
to convince readers that a harmful, addictive drug is safe and
innocuous.
Really, Zonker, that makes you no better than Joe Camel or Mr.
Butts.
MAP posted-by: Richard Lake
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