News (Media Awareness Project) - Correction: US: OPED - The Scoop, Medical Marijuana |
Title: | Correction: US: OPED - The Scoop, Medical Marijuana |
Published On: | 1999-03-23 |
Source: | The Media Awareness project |
Fetched On: | 2008-09-06 10:07:26 |
Dear Readers,
The following story, attributed to Mother Jones and posted at the following
URL (and in DND #342) is not properly identified. The item is from Mother
Jones Wire, a section of their website at http://mojones.com/ for web
publishing breaking news stories. It did not appear in Mother Jones
magazine, and is thus not an appropriate target for Letters to the Editor
(LTE) of the magazine.
Indeed, we can not confirm that the Mother Jones items in their Wire
section are even like AP or UPI wire stories, distributed to other media.
The MAP policy is to redistribute only items actually in print in the
press, or transcripts from radio or TV, and actual wire service items
identified as such.
We are sorry for any inconvenience this improper identification caused our
readers and LTE writers.
Richard Lake
Senior Editor
MAPnews, MAPnews-Digest and DrugNews-Digest
http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v99.n342.a09.html
THE SCOOP, MEDICAL MARIJUANA
Those Who Cannot Remember The Past Are Condemned To... Uh... Something
Never mind what his own study says; Drug Czar Barry McCaffrey insists
that medical marijuana is gonna stay illegal -- because it impairs
memory, interferes with motor skills, and it impairs memory.
As you already know, voters in seven states have approved the use of
marijuana strictly for medical purposes. However, the will of the
people notwithstanding, the federal government still thinks letting a
cancer patient in chemotherapy relieve their pain this way is a crime
worthy of imprisonment.
Gee, thank God somebody's trying get these troublemakers off the
streets.
Let's not confuse medical use of marijuana with recreational toking.
Casual marijuana abuse can cause serious problems for some people. But
that's not the subject here. And it impairs memory.
Here's the thing: an independent report commissioned by McCaffrey's
own Office of National Drug Control Policy has strongly recommended
legalization for medical reasons only.
McCaffrey's own investigators say that
a) marijuana's not particularly addictive b) it's not a gateway to
harder drugs c) medical use wouldn't increase casual abuse d) and for
people in grave condition and real pain, like AIDS patients suffering
from wasting syndrome, the medical benefits far outweigh the risks,
which are less than you get even with many well-known prescription
drugs.
Never mind all that. Never mind the insanity of outlawing a substance
tried by roughly one-quarter of the U.S. population. Never mind the
ongoing, ludicrous failure of drug prohibition. And never mind the
obvious historical example of alcohol prohibition.
The Drug Czar still insists that anyone putting into practice his own
office's findings will still be subject to arrest.
But suppose for a second the study had determined that marijuana was a
major public-health menace. Do you imagine General McCaffrey would
discard it so easily, or would he be waving it proudly as further
rationalization for the militarization of drug enforcement?
Dude, why spend our tax dollars on a study if you're just going to
ignore it if it doesn't find what you want?
I guess because except for cigarettes, alcohol, caffeine, and
prescription narcotics, drugs are destroying America.
And they impair memory.
The following story, attributed to Mother Jones and posted at the following
URL (and in DND #342) is not properly identified. The item is from Mother
Jones Wire, a section of their website at http://mojones.com/ for web
publishing breaking news stories. It did not appear in Mother Jones
magazine, and is thus not an appropriate target for Letters to the Editor
(LTE) of the magazine.
Indeed, we can not confirm that the Mother Jones items in their Wire
section are even like AP or UPI wire stories, distributed to other media.
The MAP policy is to redistribute only items actually in print in the
press, or transcripts from radio or TV, and actual wire service items
identified as such.
We are sorry for any inconvenience this improper identification caused our
readers and LTE writers.
Richard Lake
Senior Editor
MAPnews, MAPnews-Digest and DrugNews-Digest
http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v99.n342.a09.html
THE SCOOP, MEDICAL MARIJUANA
Those Who Cannot Remember The Past Are Condemned To... Uh... Something
Never mind what his own study says; Drug Czar Barry McCaffrey insists
that medical marijuana is gonna stay illegal -- because it impairs
memory, interferes with motor skills, and it impairs memory.
As you already know, voters in seven states have approved the use of
marijuana strictly for medical purposes. However, the will of the
people notwithstanding, the federal government still thinks letting a
cancer patient in chemotherapy relieve their pain this way is a crime
worthy of imprisonment.
Gee, thank God somebody's trying get these troublemakers off the
streets.
Let's not confuse medical use of marijuana with recreational toking.
Casual marijuana abuse can cause serious problems for some people. But
that's not the subject here. And it impairs memory.
Here's the thing: an independent report commissioned by McCaffrey's
own Office of National Drug Control Policy has strongly recommended
legalization for medical reasons only.
McCaffrey's own investigators say that
a) marijuana's not particularly addictive b) it's not a gateway to
harder drugs c) medical use wouldn't increase casual abuse d) and for
people in grave condition and real pain, like AIDS patients suffering
from wasting syndrome, the medical benefits far outweigh the risks,
which are less than you get even with many well-known prescription
drugs.
Never mind all that. Never mind the insanity of outlawing a substance
tried by roughly one-quarter of the U.S. population. Never mind the
ongoing, ludicrous failure of drug prohibition. And never mind the
obvious historical example of alcohol prohibition.
The Drug Czar still insists that anyone putting into practice his own
office's findings will still be subject to arrest.
But suppose for a second the study had determined that marijuana was a
major public-health menace. Do you imagine General McCaffrey would
discard it so easily, or would he be waving it proudly as further
rationalization for the militarization of drug enforcement?
Dude, why spend our tax dollars on a study if you're just going to
ignore it if it doesn't find what you want?
I guess because except for cigarettes, alcohol, caffeine, and
prescription narcotics, drugs are destroying America.
And they impair memory.
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