This has been an interesting read, for the most part. I cannot, for the life of me, understand why so many are up in arms over this comment. I personally found it to be funny, but sure, everyone has a different sense of humor (or none at all, in some cases

). This isn't meant to be sarcastic- I'm actually really wondering- *why* do people find this comment offensive? I'd really like to know.
Is it because the mere thought of drugs is offensive? Are people scared their kids will read this flippant comment and think it's okay to smoke weed?
I just find it strange that people will get so worked up over *this* particular item, yet expose their children to much of the very same mentality (perhaps unknowingly, but still) in television, movies, books, magazines, etc. Not to mention what goes on in schools. If you think your child hasn't heard about smoking weed or worse by the time they're in middle school, man, are you ever wrong. (If you want to get worked up about anything, get worked up over who your kid is hanging out with. If there's any HUGE factor in whether or not your kid will try something, it'll be that before it's ever a UG comment). You would basically have to keep your child in a bubble, apart from the rest of the world, in order to keep them away from all things unpure.
Instead of worrying what your kid may or may not take away from a comment in a Disney guide book, how about increasing the amount of dialogue you have with your kids about this kind of stuff? If you talk to your kids, instill your values in them, and let them know what your expectations of them are, you'll have so much less to worry about. On a personal note, my parents NEVER talked to me about drug use. Ever. It was a taboo subject in our house. Later on down the line, I ended up addicted to a drug much harder than marijuana. I'm not in any way blaming my parents for this, OR any other outside influence. In the end it was my (bad) decision- we all make choices and have to live with the consequences. I do think that if my parents had been more open about these types of things, instead of having to "shield" me from everything they deemed 'inappropriate', I might have had a much stronger foundation on which to stand. This is obviously my personal experience, and maybe it's a unique one (though I highly doubt it), but still, it's something to think about...