News (Media Awareness Project) - US OR: Supporters Of Pot Initiative Will Stop Citing Gov. |
Title: | US OR: Supporters Of Pot Initiative Will Stop Citing Gov. |
Published On: | 1998-10-02 |
Source: | Oregonian, The (OR) |
Fetched On: | 2008-09-06 23:49:17 |
SUPPORTERS OF POT INITIATIVE WILL STOP CITING GOV. KITZHABER
Proponents Of Ballot Measure 67 Misrepresent The Governor's Position On
Medical Use Of Marijuana, His Spokesman Says
Supporters of Oregon's medical marijuana initiative say they will stop
using Gov. John Kitzhaber's name in their campaign materials.
One brochure distributed by Oregonians for Medical Rights, proponents of
Ballot Measure 67, lists Kitzhaber as one of the "supporters of the medical
use of marijuana."
Bob Applegate, a Kitzhaber spokesman, said the governor, a former emergency
room physician, does believe marijuana has some legitimate medical uses,
including the alleviation of nausea due to chemotherapy and in the
treatment of glaucoma, an eye disease.
But he said the governor also believes there are synthetic substitutes for
marijuana that are just as effective as the plant itself.
Applegate said Kitzhaber "will not support the bill and will not vote for it."
The governor, he said, sees too many problems with implementation of the
measure, which would permit ill Oregonians to grow and smoke marijuana. One
question, Applegate said, is where they could obtain marijuana seeds
without breaking the law.
He compared marijuana with morphine.
"Everybody supports the use of morphine in pain relief," he said. "But
we're not suggesting that people grow their own opium poppies."
Morphine, one of the most powerful painkilling drugs, is derived from the
sap of opium poppies.
Geoff Sugerman, spokesman for the pro-medical marijuana measure, said
information for the pamphlet was compiled before Kitzhaber had taken a
public stand against the ballot measure. Sugerman said the campaign staff
relied on earlier statements of Kitzhaber's about the likely therapeutic
value of medical marijuana.
"Since we have received further information on the governor's stand, we are
not distributing the brochure any more," Sugerman said.
Opponents of the measure strongly objected to the use of Kitzhaber's name
in the brochure.
Dan Noelle, Multnomah County sheriff and a principal opponent of the
measure, said he was astounded to see Kitzhaber's name associated with the
pro-medical marijuana campaign.
"Having the governor also be a doctor gives him kind of a double-whammy on
this issue," Noelle said. "People generally like and respect him. People
would look to him on this important issue."
Proponents Of Ballot Measure 67 Misrepresent The Governor's Position On
Medical Use Of Marijuana, His Spokesman Says
Supporters of Oregon's medical marijuana initiative say they will stop
using Gov. John Kitzhaber's name in their campaign materials.
One brochure distributed by Oregonians for Medical Rights, proponents of
Ballot Measure 67, lists Kitzhaber as one of the "supporters of the medical
use of marijuana."
Bob Applegate, a Kitzhaber spokesman, said the governor, a former emergency
room physician, does believe marijuana has some legitimate medical uses,
including the alleviation of nausea due to chemotherapy and in the
treatment of glaucoma, an eye disease.
But he said the governor also believes there are synthetic substitutes for
marijuana that are just as effective as the plant itself.
Applegate said Kitzhaber "will not support the bill and will not vote for it."
The governor, he said, sees too many problems with implementation of the
measure, which would permit ill Oregonians to grow and smoke marijuana. One
question, Applegate said, is where they could obtain marijuana seeds
without breaking the law.
He compared marijuana with morphine.
"Everybody supports the use of morphine in pain relief," he said. "But
we're not suggesting that people grow their own opium poppies."
Morphine, one of the most powerful painkilling drugs, is derived from the
sap of opium poppies.
Geoff Sugerman, spokesman for the pro-medical marijuana measure, said
information for the pamphlet was compiled before Kitzhaber had taken a
public stand against the ballot measure. Sugerman said the campaign staff
relied on earlier statements of Kitzhaber's about the likely therapeutic
value of medical marijuana.
"Since we have received further information on the governor's stand, we are
not distributing the brochure any more," Sugerman said.
Opponents of the measure strongly objected to the use of Kitzhaber's name
in the brochure.
Dan Noelle, Multnomah County sheriff and a principal opponent of the
measure, said he was astounded to see Kitzhaber's name associated with the
pro-medical marijuana campaign.
"Having the governor also be a doctor gives him kind of a double-whammy on
this issue," Noelle said. "People generally like and respect him. People
would look to him on this important issue."
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