Rave Radio: Offline (0/0)
Email: Password:
News (Media Awareness Project) - US CA: Editorial: Feds' Wayward Path on Pot
Title:US CA: Editorial: Feds' Wayward Path on Pot
Published On:2004-07-07
Source:Los Angeles Times (CA)
Fetched On:2008-08-22 06:05:33
FEDS' WAYWARD PATH ON POT

It isn't surprising that the Bush administration clashed with California
over its 1996 voter initiative that approved medical use of marijuana under
remarkably liberal conditions. The Justice Department raided medical pot
farms, arrested medical pot distributors and threatened to prosecute
doctors for recommending or prescribing marijuana to AIDS and cancer
patients and other chronically ill people.

Today, however, the Justice Department's medical marijuana war seems
increasingly out of step with the whole country.

Last fall, the Supreme Court upheld a lower court ruling barring federal
officials from prosecuting doctors for their recommendations. Two months
ago, Vermont became the ninth state to let seriously ill patients use
medicinal marijuana. And two weeks ago, the United Methodist Church,
Presbyterian Church, Evangelical Lutheran Church in America and other
mainstream religious groups supported doctors' rights to prescribe pot as a
when-all-else-fails treatment for the seriously ill.

A House bill scheduled for a vote today would prohibit the use of federal
funds to arrest and prosecute doctors, medical marijuana users and
caregivers. A similar bill was defeated last year on a 273-152 vote. This
year's bipartisan measure, by Reps. Dana Rohrabacher (R-Huntington Beach)
and Sam Farr (D-Salinas), is not expected to pass either but is likely to
pick up several more votes.

Opponents increasingly don't deny the medical benefits of pot but still
fear implicit sanctioning of its recreational use.

The best way to thwart casual use of the drug is to let doctors prescribe
it in closely circumscribed and carefully regulated ways. And under federal
law, neither the courts nor legislatures can do that. Only the Drug
Enforcement Administration can get at the root of the problem: its
nonsensical classification of marijuana as a Schedule I substance, a taboo
category for drugs such as heroin that have no "accepted medical use" and a
high potential for abuse.

The DEA should move marijuana to at least Schedule II, its slightly less
prohibitive category for morphine and cocaine.

That change isn't likely to happen in an election year. But as voters speak
in more states, as the Supreme Court considers their right to do so, and
medical journals and studies continue to find benefit in marijuana, the
Justice Department should explicitly cease its campaign of intimidation.
Member Comments
No member comments available...