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Monday, September 22, 2008

Marijuana Reform Group Takes on the NFL

SAFER's Ricky Williams billboardNew England Patriots running backKevin Faulk was suspended for one week and fined two weekly paychecks, or about $300,000, by NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell this week after pleading guilty in July to misdemeanor marijuana possession charges. That has the marijuana reform group SAFER (Safer Alternatives for Enjoyable Recreation) crying foul.

SAFER, whose primary argument is that marijuana is safer than alcohol and should not be treated more harshly, announced Thursday that it would deliver an online petition and letter calling for changes to the NFL’s marijuana policy to Goodell today in New York City. For SAFER, the huge fine assessed against Faulk is rank hypocrisy from a sporting organization that accepts hundreds of millions of dollars in alcohol advertising.

The petition reads as follows:

“Players with the National Football League who use marijuana instead of alcohol to relax and recreate are making a rational choice to use a less harmful substance.

“Suspending these players and taking away hundreds of thousands (or sometimes millions) of dollars for using marijuana is driving them to use alcohol, a drug that — unlike marijuana — contributes to violent and aggressive behavior. Unless the NFL plans to suspend every player who receives a speeding ticket — which is considered an offense on par with marijuana possession in some states — it has absolutely no reason to suspend players for the simple use and possession of marijuana. Doing so is not only irrational, but given the NFL’s acceptance and blatant promotion of alcohol, it is exceptionally hypocritical.

“Marijuana is safer than alcohol and the National Football League’s substance abuse policy should be changed immediately to reflect that fact.”

“The NFL has no problem with players using alcohol and it accepts hundreds of millions of dollars to promote booze to football fans of all ages,” said SAFER executive director Mason Tvert. “Yet the league punishes those players who make the safer choice to use marijuana instead of alcohol to relax and recreate. The NFL is driving its players to drink. Every objective study on marijuana has concluded that it is far less harmful than alcohol both to those who use it and to others around them,” Tvert said. “It is a mystery why Commissioner Goodell and the NFL would want to steer the biggest, toughest guys in the country away from using marijuana and toward using alcohol, which contributes to aggressive behavior and countless violent crimes.”

This isn’t the first time SAFER has gone after the NFL’s marijuana policy. Last October, the group erected a billboard across the street from Invesco Field in Denver that featured an image of NFL superstar Ricky Williams in a Denver Broncos jersey, urging the recently reinstated player to “Come to Denver: Where the people support your SAFER choice.”

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