News (Media Awareness Project) - US: Wire: Drug Czar Criticizes Medical Pot |
Title: | US: Wire: Drug Czar Criticizes Medical Pot |
Published On: | 2000-03-04 |
Source: | Associated Press |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-28 17:35:21 |
DRUG CZAR CRITICIZES MEDICAL POT
SIMI VALLEY, Calif. (AP) -- White House drug czar Barry McCaffrey
spoke harshly against the medical use of marijuana, calling much of it
``a crock'' and saying more research is needed.
``Ask a doctor if he really wants a big blunt stuck in a patient's
face as treatment,'' McCaffrey said on Friday, the final day of a
national conference on addiction at the Ronald Reagan Presidential
Library and Museum. ``A lot of this is a crock.''
Some 20 medical marijuana supporters protested outside the library,
carrying signs, banners and a pot plant.
Marijuana is banned by the federal government, although voters in six
states -- Alaska, Arizona, California, Maine, Oregon and Washington --
have approved laws allowing the drug to be used for medical purposes.
McCaffrey -- a longtime opponent of medical marijuana use and other
forms of drug legalization -- said the federal government is spending
increasing sums to fight substance abuse, and suggested state and
local governments need to do more to ensure the money is well-spent.
SIMI VALLEY, Calif. (AP) -- White House drug czar Barry McCaffrey
spoke harshly against the medical use of marijuana, calling much of it
``a crock'' and saying more research is needed.
``Ask a doctor if he really wants a big blunt stuck in a patient's
face as treatment,'' McCaffrey said on Friday, the final day of a
national conference on addiction at the Ronald Reagan Presidential
Library and Museum. ``A lot of this is a crock.''
Some 20 medical marijuana supporters protested outside the library,
carrying signs, banners and a pot plant.
Marijuana is banned by the federal government, although voters in six
states -- Alaska, Arizona, California, Maine, Oregon and Washington --
have approved laws allowing the drug to be used for medical purposes.
McCaffrey -- a longtime opponent of medical marijuana use and other
forms of drug legalization -- said the federal government is spending
increasing sums to fight substance abuse, and suggested state and
local governments need to do more to ensure the money is well-spent.
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