News (Media Awareness Project) - US CA: LTE: Proposition 215 Is Illegal |
Title: | US CA: LTE: Proposition 215 Is Illegal |
Published On: | 1999-07-22 |
Source: | San Jose Mercury News (CA) |
Fetched On: | 2008-09-06 01:39:50 |
PROPOSITION 215 IS ILLEGAL
You take Gov. Gray Davis to task for continuing to oppose
implementation of California's ``medicinal'' marijuana law,
Proposition 215 (Opinion, July 19). Despite support by the Mercury
News, the solution developed by the task force headed by touchy-feely
state Sen. John Vasconcellos is wrong-headed.
The truth is that Proposition 215 is illegal because it is based on
the impossibly hard act of a state countermanding a federal law.
Further, Proposition 215 creates truck-sized loopholes for
recreational use of marijuana allowing, among other things, wide-open,
home-grown marijuana and uncontrolled, non-physician-generated
marijuana prescriptions.
The solution to getting ``medicinal'' marijuana into the hands of
patients who have no other successful resolution to their pain will
not come from Sacramento but from Washington. Federal law currently
allows a medical doctor to prescribe all kinds of dangerous and
habit-forming opiates and barbiturate-based sedatives, hypnotics and
anti-spasmodics. That law could and should be changed to allow truly
medical use of marijuana.
Of course, such a tightly drawn solution would continue to truly
prohibit, just as opiates and barbiturates are prohibited now, the
growing and sale of marijuana for non-physician prescribed purposes.
I hope you re-think your position so that the dangerous recreational
use of marijuana will not be expanded.
ERNEST KONNYU
Saratoga
You take Gov. Gray Davis to task for continuing to oppose
implementation of California's ``medicinal'' marijuana law,
Proposition 215 (Opinion, July 19). Despite support by the Mercury
News, the solution developed by the task force headed by touchy-feely
state Sen. John Vasconcellos is wrong-headed.
The truth is that Proposition 215 is illegal because it is based on
the impossibly hard act of a state countermanding a federal law.
Further, Proposition 215 creates truck-sized loopholes for
recreational use of marijuana allowing, among other things, wide-open,
home-grown marijuana and uncontrolled, non-physician-generated
marijuana prescriptions.
The solution to getting ``medicinal'' marijuana into the hands of
patients who have no other successful resolution to their pain will
not come from Sacramento but from Washington. Federal law currently
allows a medical doctor to prescribe all kinds of dangerous and
habit-forming opiates and barbiturate-based sedatives, hypnotics and
anti-spasmodics. That law could and should be changed to allow truly
medical use of marijuana.
Of course, such a tightly drawn solution would continue to truly
prohibit, just as opiates and barbiturates are prohibited now, the
growing and sale of marijuana for non-physician prescribed purposes.
I hope you re-think your position so that the dangerous recreational
use of marijuana will not be expanded.
ERNEST KONNYU
Saratoga
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