Cannabis literature from Holland, where it's legal to buy small quantities of the drug for personal use.
It's a surprise to find a poster of brightly coloured marijuana leaves adorning the office of Melbourne psychiatrist David Castle. After all, Castle – a professor at St Vincent's Hospital – is, with colleague Robyn Murray of London's Institute of Psychiatry, the author of the prize-winning tome, Marijuana and Madness, a collection of scientific essays on the link between marijuana and schizophrenia.
As we sit in his bright, roomy office, the youthful, denim-clad psychiatrist talks in his clipped South African accent, effusing sympathy for the plant that causes so much heartache to parents and endless social debate.
The sympathy is inherited, it seems. His mother, a renowned Cape Town doctor who was noted for her "interest in things slightly off the edge", explored the medicinal uses of the narcotic weed during the 1950s. Castle has continued the family tradition.
As our discussion weaves through the data, I struggle at first to divine Castle's message. Finally, it dawns on me. The psychiatrist is … I think … exasperated. "When it comes to the marijuana debate, science and rationality have very little to do with it: the truth about marijuana has been lost in the smoke of political rhetoric," Castle tells me.
He is not alone. The 'Marijuana Wars' have waged for decades and there are numerous veterans who also have that exasperated sound.
WAYNE HALL IS former director of Australia's National Drug and Alcohol Research Centre (NDARC), and now a professor at the school of population health at the University of Queensland. Australia has probably done more research on marijuana than anywhere else: a result of its high rate of use and ample research funding, Hall tells me. He has pondered the harms of marijuana for the last 13 years and his commentaries appear in prestigious journals, like a recent one on cannabis and schizophrenia in the January 2006 issue of The Lancet.
"It's hard to get the real message out because the debate is so polarised. If it is perceived to be harmful, people want to go to war and lock up every user; if it is perceived to be harmless, they want to legalise it completely. The truth is that cannabis is a drug like any other – some people will experience difficulty," says Hall.
It seems that after all the textbooks, the scientific papers, and the front-page headlines, it's still the same old story: marijuana used in moderation is a relatively harmless drug. Pharmacologist Les Iversen, now a visiting Oxford scholar, tells me, "Marijuana is somewhat more harmful than aspirin." Iversen should know; he spent 10 years assessing the risks of drugs for pharmaceutical giant Merck & Company, and recently served on Britain's Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs.
On the scale of harmful substances, marijuana ranks fairly low. Tobacco and alcohol exact a far greater toll, between them accounting for some 12 per cent of global deaths. Even aspirin is credited with causing in the vicinity of 50 deaths a year in Australia alone. No deaths are attributable to marijuana.
Yet in the war on drugs, marijuana continues to be singled out as the principal scapegoat. In 2005, some three quarters of a million people in the U.S. alone were arrested on marijuana-related charges, about 89 per cent of these just for possession. Even cancer patients who were using marijuana to ease their symptoms were among those arrested.
In Australia, the state of New South Wales recently toughened its laws, and Prime Minister John Howard has called for more to follow: "I will ask [the state premiers] to agree with me that part of the solution to the mental health problem is a tougher line on marijuana, and I imagine they will agree with me," he said, ahead of a forthcoming summit with the states.
Marijuana has been demonised, says Castle, to the point that even its considerable medicinal and agricultural uses have been disavowed. The plant is extremely hardy, and has as much to offer the environmentally challenged world today as it did in times of old, when 'Indian hemp' provided the mainstay for ship sails and rope.
![]() |
|
The cover of Life magazine, October 1969.
|
SOME PUT the scapegoating of marijuana down to the conservative political tide sweeping Western democracies. Until 2004, Peter Cohen was the director of the Centre for Drug Research at the University of Amsterdam. The Netherlands, as any backpacker will tell you, is famous as one of the few places in the world where you can legally buy cannabis. But marijuana use is still technically illegal: individuals can only buy up to 5 grams, and advertising its sale is not permitted.
For 20 years, Cohen's centre documented the country's experiment of decriminalising cannabis, allowing small quantities to be sold from the coffee shops that now outnumber butcher shops in parts of Amsterdam. His studies show drug laws have very little impact on the rate of cannabis use anywhere in the world. "There are enormous differences in the rates of drug use between countries," he says. "We don't really know why. For instance in the Netherlands, 17 per cent of people have tried it; the U.K. rate is twice as high. We don't think drug policy has anything to do with it."
In his view, the direction of marijuana research is at the whim of the political climate. "There's a fashion now to determine the cause of mental health problems; they want research that shows the harms of marijuana. But people's lives don't fall apart because of marijuana. I call it Soviet science – science geared to produce a political point."
Alex Wodak is director of the Alcohol and Drug Service at St. Vincent's Hospital in Sydney and Australia's most colourful drug-war resistance hero. He agrees politics is a big driver in the marijuana wars. "[Australian Prime Minister John] Howard can't lose on this. If he wins, he'll be wrapped in the Australian flag as protecting the youth of the future. If he loses, then the states [who are his political enemies] get labelled 'soft on drugs'."
Yet even if most people are not harmed by smoking marijuana – and, as Iversen puts it, "many find it a very useful drug" – there's no doubt a minority is harmed.
And that minority is recognisable to many. It might be the vulnerable teenager for whom marijuana is the grease that slides them towards aimless drug-dependence; psychiatrists will think of their mentally ill patients whose marijuana habit makes their disease much worse; and then there is that minority in the general population, largely undetectable, who have a predisposition to schizophrenia. Most psychiatrists now believe marijuana smoking will push those susceptible to schizophrenia over the edge.



Inconsistency
At 43 years of age with no criminal record I have recently been arrested in the state of NSW for growing one Cannabis plant and possession of a small amount for personal use (depression, spinal injury & arthritis).
I am now looking at a criminal record and a maximum penalty of 2 years in jail for each offence (+fines).
If I was living in Canberra (our nation's capital) I would have received an on the spot fine of $110 for each offence and no criminal record.
I found by smoking a small amount of Cannabis in the evening I was able to cut my dosage of anti-depressant in half and gain a restful night's sleep free of pain. I was on the road to recovery until the arrest.
I guess I'll have to move to Canberra.
Cosmos, you f*@#ed up
Wow! Even COSMOS magazine has it wrong and it is obvious to see that the writer of this paper never tried marijuana himself/herself...
For one, in the paper it claims that juveniles we're reported using 20-30 bongs a day... I think what the writer means to say it "bowls"...
Bongs - A smoking device which uses water to trap the smoke in the bottle
Bowls- A chamber for storing marijuana so it can burned to inhale the smoke
You cannot use 20-30 bongs a day as that means you are using 20-30 different smoking devices a day, when in fact many marijuana users may not even have their own official smoking device and just make homemade devices...
You can however smoke 20-30 "bowls" or "hits" or "uses" of marijuana to ensure that your brain receives the maximum amount of THC (the active ingredient in marijuana).
As for the addiction part...
MARIJUANA DOES NOT MAKE YOU PSYCHICALLY ADDICTED... I can attest to this myself. It may however, feel so good that you may want to use it again. But there is no actual psychical dependence... Your actual body does not need marijuana or THC.
Re: Cosmos you f*@#ed up
That's a little pedantic methinks. Bongs, bowls etc.
For the record, 'bowls' is a US centric term to describe the larger glass cannabis 'crucibles' (for want of a better word) that they use in their bongs to smoke pot.
In Australia, the term is generally 'cones'. Australian smokers generally use bongs with 11mm diameter aluminium pipes (or garden hose) and brass 'conepieces' to load their cannabis into.
Unfortunately, due to our draconian laws, we Australian smokers have to resort to making our own bongs out of everyday materials nowadays. For example, this could mean using an 'Ice Break' bottle, a short length of garden hose and a cone piece fashioned from aluminium foil or 'Milo' tin sealing foil.
As for physical addiction, I don't believe it is possible. At least not in the generally accepted sense of physical addiction as with heroin or nicotine.
However, I do believe there is a very strong case for psychological addiction.
I base my opinions on 30 plus years of smoking cannabis and 25 plus years of studying as much scientific literature I could get my hands on. I continue to closely follow current research into cannabis and firmly believe that common sense and scientific proof will prevail, leading to legalisation of cannabis for at least medicinal use in Australia.
Marijuana does not cause
Marijuana does not cause overdose deaths and no one ending up in a drug treatment center is there because of marijuana. The number of people in hospital emergency rooms who say they have used marijuana has increased. On this basis, the visit may be recorded as marijuana-related even if marijuana had nothing to do with the medical condition preceding the hospital visit. Many more teenagers use marijuana than use drugs such as heroin and cocaine. As a result, when teenagers visit hospital emergency rooms, they report marijuana much more frequently than they report heroin and cocaine.
grow up society!!!!!
It’s really annoying isn’t it! You get your license at 16 and drive around in your weapon of choice, in a culture that supports faster weapons because they’re cooler! You turn 18 go to the pub drink a beer or 30 depends on your background acceptance of today’s culture, choose a job high stress! Lets have 30 cigarette brakes a day! mmmmm interesting you become an adult free to question and think about real life issues and how the world works. You have a mate, friend or lucky enough a girlfriend who introduces you to weed. You spend your first time really talking about the important things in life, laughing about the mundane and eating the best food you’ve ever had. And then reality hits and you find yourself quietly asking if your friend knows anyone he can buy some weed off, quietly and in hushed sue do military hand symbols you manage to acquire a small amount that costs you a fortune. Then you device how to hide it so the sniffer dogs don’t catch you ("sniffer dogs for peets sake") what the f$%^# is wrong with this picture. Your an adult and have made adult decisions about having a joint, how dare anybody tell you any different, this country and its people need to grow up. This whole debate issue is archaic at best; the fact that there is an issue shows how out of balance everything is.
And that’s my 2 cents.
Follow on from previous comment
Following on from previous comment. If you go to Amsterdam...don't forget their Marijuana is laced with heroin. A good study for scientists would be to analyse the contents of drugs throughout the world. Also most UK "black" is melted down vinyl records, sold to unsuspecting teenagers. Places like Bali in Indonesia, will offer Marijuana to all tourists. This is a con, you will be followed, arrested by police and have to pay a large bribe to the police, to which they will "confiscate" your drugs, hand back to "runner", who will offer them to next tourist. Would be great for a study on the worldwide sale of drugs. Yes, addicts are a vulnerable target.This is why it will never be legalised. Not for medical/social reasons, but Greed, money and power.