News (Media Awareness Project) - US TX: PUB LTE: A Rational Drug Policy |
Title: | US TX: PUB LTE: A Rational Drug Policy |
Published On: | 2005-07-05 |
Source: | Monitor, The (McAllen, TX) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-16 00:58:46 |
A rational drug policy
To the editor:
Thanks for the summary on medical marijuana ("Down, but not out:
Ruling against medical pot may help cause," June 23). The apparent
passage of a bill in Rhode Island on the heels of the Supreme Court
decision speaks well for the ultimate triumph of compassion, reason
and the people's voice.
Meanwhile in Texas, a bill failed that would only have allowed a jury
to hear evidence that a defendant was using marijuana for medical purposes.
In a state where some 75 percent of citizens approve of medical use
and government estimates some 80,000 teens sell marijuana to class
mates -- enough for one in every classroom from eighth grade on,
courtesy of prohibition and the illegal drug trade that tempts and
employs the young -- we had better wonder if the fanaticism and
official misinformation displayed regarding medical marijuana has
infected our ability to act rationally on any matter of drug policy.
Jerry Epstein,
Houston
To the editor:
Thanks for the summary on medical marijuana ("Down, but not out:
Ruling against medical pot may help cause," June 23). The apparent
passage of a bill in Rhode Island on the heels of the Supreme Court
decision speaks well for the ultimate triumph of compassion, reason
and the people's voice.
Meanwhile in Texas, a bill failed that would only have allowed a jury
to hear evidence that a defendant was using marijuana for medical purposes.
In a state where some 75 percent of citizens approve of medical use
and government estimates some 80,000 teens sell marijuana to class
mates -- enough for one in every classroom from eighth grade on,
courtesy of prohibition and the illegal drug trade that tempts and
employs the young -- we had better wonder if the fanaticism and
official misinformation displayed regarding medical marijuana has
infected our ability to act rationally on any matter of drug policy.
Jerry Epstein,
Houston
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