News (Media Awareness Project) - US OR: Column: Obama Should Act On Medical Marijuana |
Title: | US OR: Column: Obama Should Act On Medical Marijuana |
Published On: | 2009-01-30 |
Source: | Statesman Journal (Salem, OR) |
Fetched On: | 2009-01-31 19:52:11 |
OBAMA SHOULD ACT ON MEDICAL MARIJUANA
During the campaign, President Obama said he would stop federal raids
of medical marijuana clubs in states (like California) that had passed
medical marijuana laws.
Yet federal agents raided medical marijuana dispensaries, including
the Patient to Patient Collective in South Lake Tahoe, two days after
his inauguration. The Tahoe Daily Tribune reported that agents seized
between 5 and 10 pounds of marijuana.
The Marijuana Policy Project, which wants to legalize marijuana,
accused the Drug Enforcement Administration of "defying" Obama's
position on medical marijuana and "called on the president to
immediately replace Bush administration holdovers at DEA.
"During the presidential campaign," the press release continued,
"Obama repeatedly promised not to waste federal resources interfering
in states with laws protecting medical-marijuana patients from arrest,
and he told Southern Oregon's Mail Tribune editorial board on March
28, 2008, 'I'm not going to be using Justice Department resources to
try to circumvent state laws on this issue.'"
So will Obama keep his word by directing federal drug agents to
concentrate on going after drug kingpins instead of sick people?
I understand that Obama has bigger issues on his plate, which probably
is why the White House has yet to respond to my Tuesday query. That
said, this issue is vital to many Californians with health problems.
Item No. 2 for the Marijuana Policy Project: In the closing week of
Bushdom, the Drug
Enforcement Administration rejected Administrative Law Judge Ellen
Bittner's decision to
allow the University of Massachusetts to grow marijuana for medical
research. Until now,
only the University of Mississippi has filled that role -- and not
well, according to
critics.
Again, the Bush-DEA's action undermined the position of the incoming
administration. Obama also told the Mail Tribune, "I think the basic
concept of using medical marijuana for the same purposes and with the
same controls as other drugs prescribed by doctors -- I think that's
entirely appropriate."
Obama is right. Some doctors believe that marijuana has properties --
it can ease pain, is an anti-inflammatory and stimulates appetite --
beneficial to patients with AIDS, glaucoma and muscular dystrophy and
other chronic diseases, as well as cancer patients undergoing
chemotherapy.
Aaron Houston, the Marijuana Policy Project's director of government
relations, said U. Mass. agronomy professor Lyle E. Craker has until
Friday to file a motion to reconsider the DEA's last-minute gambit,
which Craker plans to do. "We want (White House Chief of Staff) Rahm
Emanuel and the White House to do the same thing that the White House
did for the other actions" -- that is, direct federal agencies to hold
off on rule-making on medical marijuana until the Obama folks take a
look at it.
Judge Bittner was highly skeptical of some of the claims made by
marijuana advocates who complained about the quality of medical
marijuana supplied by the University of Mississippi. But Bittner also
found that the National Institute of Drug Abuse has failed to make
marijuana "available to all researchers who have a legitimate need for
it in their research."
You could understand the institute's opposition to these projects if
marijuana were a rare and lethal drug. But it is impossible to take a
lethal dose, and marijuana is so prevalent that a 2005 National Drug
Threat Assessment reported that, in some areas, marijuana seems
"easier for youths to obtain than alcohol or cigarettes."
To the extent that federal officials have been slow to approve medical
marijuana research, you have to believe that their biggest fear was
that the research would be successful. That's right, it might help
people in pain.
During the campaign, President Obama said he would stop federal raids
of medical marijuana clubs in states (like California) that had passed
medical marijuana laws.
Yet federal agents raided medical marijuana dispensaries, including
the Patient to Patient Collective in South Lake Tahoe, two days after
his inauguration. The Tahoe Daily Tribune reported that agents seized
between 5 and 10 pounds of marijuana.
The Marijuana Policy Project, which wants to legalize marijuana,
accused the Drug Enforcement Administration of "defying" Obama's
position on medical marijuana and "called on the president to
immediately replace Bush administration holdovers at DEA.
"During the presidential campaign," the press release continued,
"Obama repeatedly promised not to waste federal resources interfering
in states with laws protecting medical-marijuana patients from arrest,
and he told Southern Oregon's Mail Tribune editorial board on March
28, 2008, 'I'm not going to be using Justice Department resources to
try to circumvent state laws on this issue.'"
So will Obama keep his word by directing federal drug agents to
concentrate on going after drug kingpins instead of sick people?
I understand that Obama has bigger issues on his plate, which probably
is why the White House has yet to respond to my Tuesday query. That
said, this issue is vital to many Californians with health problems.
Item No. 2 for the Marijuana Policy Project: In the closing week of
Bushdom, the Drug
Enforcement Administration rejected Administrative Law Judge Ellen
Bittner's decision to
allow the University of Massachusetts to grow marijuana for medical
research. Until now,
only the University of Mississippi has filled that role -- and not
well, according to
critics.
Again, the Bush-DEA's action undermined the position of the incoming
administration. Obama also told the Mail Tribune, "I think the basic
concept of using medical marijuana for the same purposes and with the
same controls as other drugs prescribed by doctors -- I think that's
entirely appropriate."
Obama is right. Some doctors believe that marijuana has properties --
it can ease pain, is an anti-inflammatory and stimulates appetite --
beneficial to patients with AIDS, glaucoma and muscular dystrophy and
other chronic diseases, as well as cancer patients undergoing
chemotherapy.
Aaron Houston, the Marijuana Policy Project's director of government
relations, said U. Mass. agronomy professor Lyle E. Craker has until
Friday to file a motion to reconsider the DEA's last-minute gambit,
which Craker plans to do. "We want (White House Chief of Staff) Rahm
Emanuel and the White House to do the same thing that the White House
did for the other actions" -- that is, direct federal agencies to hold
off on rule-making on medical marijuana until the Obama folks take a
look at it.
Judge Bittner was highly skeptical of some of the claims made by
marijuana advocates who complained about the quality of medical
marijuana supplied by the University of Mississippi. But Bittner also
found that the National Institute of Drug Abuse has failed to make
marijuana "available to all researchers who have a legitimate need for
it in their research."
You could understand the institute's opposition to these projects if
marijuana were a rare and lethal drug. But it is impossible to take a
lethal dose, and marijuana is so prevalent that a 2005 National Drug
Threat Assessment reported that, in some areas, marijuana seems
"easier for youths to obtain than alcohol or cigarettes."
To the extent that federal officials have been slow to approve medical
marijuana research, you have to believe that their biggest fear was
that the research would be successful. That's right, it might help
people in pain.
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