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News (Media Awareness Project) - US NJ: PUB LTE: Law Source Of Misinformation About Marijuana
Title:US NJ: PUB LTE: Law Source Of Misinformation About Marijuana
Published On:2003-03-13
Source:Ocean County Observer (NJ)
Fetched On:2008-01-20 22:19:19
LAW SOURCE OF MISINFORMATION ABOUT MARIJUANA

The recent letter to the Observer from Terrence P. Farley, director of the
Ocean County Narcotics Strike Force, was most appropriately titled,
"Misinformation abounds on medical marijuana." What he wrote was indeed
full of misinformation, not to mention half-truths and unsubstantiated claims.

Farley seemed especially unnerved because recently someone with 26 years
experience as a policeman wrote to the Observer supporting medical
marijuana. He noted that Nelson Randolph Jr. was writing in support of my
efforts to help my wife through the final stages of her 32 year battle with
multiple sclerosis, including occasionally being able to honor Cheryl's
requests for marijuana butter and salad dressing for her pain and
spasticity. Farley then proceeded to say Cheryl's public support of medical
marijuana did "great harm to the public." He ended his letter by saying
arguments for medical marijuana rights from people like Cheryl have "been a
hoax to try to get public support for legalized drugs."

I read his letter to Cheryl even though I was afraid Farley's comments
might hurt her. I asked Cheryl how she felt about the things said about us
and she said that she was hurt that anybody would accuse her of being a
dangerous hoax.

The misinformation and misdirection that Farley perpetuates is too
voluminous for me to be able to respond to all of it. That would best be
accomplished in a public debate forum that Farley refuses to have. His most
blatant violations of accuracy were as follows.

He says, "We are constantly being told that marijuana cures a number of
serious illnesses." False. Patients have never said marijuana is a cure for
any disease. They do, however, tell of marijuana relieving some of the
debilitating symptoms of their diseases.

He talks of ongoing research by the Institute of Medicine that was in fact
completed more than four years ago. He claims medical marijuana advocates
never mention that the IOM discusses the dangers of smoked marijuana even
though he knows that Cheryl has said for 10 years that she doesn't smoke
marijuana but consumes it in an edible form. I have read the complete IOM
final report. It seems that Farley ignores the parts where, on page 5, it
said, "Except for the harms associated with smoking, the adverse effects of
marijuana use are within the range of effects tolerated for other
medications," and, on page 159, "For terminal patients suffering
debilitating pain or nausea and for whom all indicated medications have
failed to provide relief, the medical benefits of smoked marijuana might
outweigh the harm."

Farley wrote at length about the detrimental effects of marijuana on those
who consume it. They would be the side effects that the IOM refers to as
within normal range for medicine. Unwanted side effects from Cheryl's legal
medicines, however, have precipitated at least three hospital stays for her.

Farley says a prescription drug Marinol is available and contains synthetic
marijuana. He doesn't mention that the MS Society rejects Marinol as
medicine for any symptom of multiple sclerosis. Additionally, Marinol does
not contain synthetic marijuana any more than an eggplant contains eggs.

As to his summation saying the "Whole medical marijuana argument is and has
been a hoax to get public support for legalized drugs." That would mean
that the following groups and people are partaking in such a hoax and doing
what Farley terms a great harm to the public: the Health Departments of our
closest allies, Great Britain, Canada, and Australia; Prime Minister Tony
Blair; the New Jersey State Nurses Association; N.J. Rep. Rob Andrews; the
New England Journal of Medicine; former New Jersey Gov. Brendan Byrne; his
Attorney General Robert Del Tufo; and a list of others too long to mention

The most important thing Farley neglects to mention was that Phase Three
clinical tests in England using 350 multiple sclerosis patients proved
marijuana caused a significant reduction of their spasticity and pain, with
verification at www.gwpharm.com. The results were announced three months
ago and MS patients in England will be able to have a sublingual spray
containing marijuana, not Marinol, available by prescription this year. MS
patients in the United States will not. Now that is some hoax.

Jim Miller

Silverton
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