News (Media Awareness Project) - US CA: Editorial: Dopey Federal Thinking |
Title: | US CA: Editorial: Dopey Federal Thinking |
Published On: | 2003-05-27 |
Source: | Los Angeles Times (CA) |
Fetched On: | 2008-08-25 01:44:47 |
DOPEY FEDERAL THINKING
Federal drug czar John Walters has plenty of problems on his hands.
Crack cocaine use by 10th-graders has climbed for two years.
Illegal use of prescription sedatives by older teens is also up. In
recent weeks, however, the director of the Office of National Drug
Control Policy has wasted his valuable time not only fretting about a
problem that doesn't exist but urging Washington to meddle in state
matters that should be none of his office's business.
At a hearing of the House Criminal Justice Subcommittee, Walters urged
legislators to pass HR 2086, a bill by Rep. Mark E. Souder (R-Ind.)
that would let him use taxpayer dollars to pay for media campaigns
directly attacking state medical marijuana programs and ballot
initiatives. The bill also would take away at least $11 million that
was meant to be used by state and local police against
"high-intensity" drug trafficking and give it to federal agents so
they can prosecute doctors attempting to prescribe medical marijuana
in California and the seven other states that have crafted programs
authorizing its limited use.
Rates of marijuana use are at their lowest in 19 years, though its use
among teens is certainly still a problem.
The media messages that Walters has sponsored, aimed at educating
teens that marijuana can be carcinogenic, are certainly worthwhile.
There is no evidence, however, that state medical marijuana programs
harm anyone.
They may be helping many: Studies by the federal Institute of
Medicine, published in the New England Journal of Medicine, have shown
that marijuana can uniquely and effectively relieve the pain and
nausea caused by cancer, AIDS and other serious illnesses.
The idea of taking away money that local police need to control
traffickers who distribute the crack cocaine that turns many street
people violent and using it to prosecute doctors helping out dying or
chronically pain-ridden patients is not just useless; it is harmful.
The crackdowns that HR 2086 envisions should be pondered long and
thoughtfully, but the bill was introduced with virtually no debate May
14 and was moved out of the Criminal Justice Subcommittee by voice
vote the next day. The full House could consider it as early as this
week. Many of the House Republicans pushing HR 2086 campaigned on
promises to keep Washington from interfering with how professionals
(such as doctors and business leaders) do their jobs, from meddling
with states' rights and from restricting individual liberty.
By voting for HR 2086, they would be trampling on all
three.
Federal drug czar John Walters has plenty of problems on his hands.
Crack cocaine use by 10th-graders has climbed for two years.
Illegal use of prescription sedatives by older teens is also up. In
recent weeks, however, the director of the Office of National Drug
Control Policy has wasted his valuable time not only fretting about a
problem that doesn't exist but urging Washington to meddle in state
matters that should be none of his office's business.
At a hearing of the House Criminal Justice Subcommittee, Walters urged
legislators to pass HR 2086, a bill by Rep. Mark E. Souder (R-Ind.)
that would let him use taxpayer dollars to pay for media campaigns
directly attacking state medical marijuana programs and ballot
initiatives. The bill also would take away at least $11 million that
was meant to be used by state and local police against
"high-intensity" drug trafficking and give it to federal agents so
they can prosecute doctors attempting to prescribe medical marijuana
in California and the seven other states that have crafted programs
authorizing its limited use.
Rates of marijuana use are at their lowest in 19 years, though its use
among teens is certainly still a problem.
The media messages that Walters has sponsored, aimed at educating
teens that marijuana can be carcinogenic, are certainly worthwhile.
There is no evidence, however, that state medical marijuana programs
harm anyone.
They may be helping many: Studies by the federal Institute of
Medicine, published in the New England Journal of Medicine, have shown
that marijuana can uniquely and effectively relieve the pain and
nausea caused by cancer, AIDS and other serious illnesses.
The idea of taking away money that local police need to control
traffickers who distribute the crack cocaine that turns many street
people violent and using it to prosecute doctors helping out dying or
chronically pain-ridden patients is not just useless; it is harmful.
The crackdowns that HR 2086 envisions should be pondered long and
thoughtfully, but the bill was introduced with virtually no debate May
14 and was moved out of the Criminal Justice Subcommittee by voice
vote the next day. The full House could consider it as early as this
week. Many of the House Republicans pushing HR 2086 campaigned on
promises to keep Washington from interfering with how professionals
(such as doctors and business leaders) do their jobs, from meddling
with states' rights and from restricting individual liberty.
By voting for HR 2086, they would be trampling on all
three.
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