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News (Media Awareness Project) - US WI: OPED: Medical Marijuana Ban Fails Common-Sense Test
Title:US WI: OPED: Medical Marijuana Ban Fails Common-Sense Test
Published On:2002-05-30
Source:Kenosha News (WI)
Fetched On:2008-01-23 06:13:50
MEDICAL MARIJUANA BAN FAILS COMMON-SENSE TEST

As a rule, political disputes feature conflicting positions that are
obviously or at least arguably rational. There are, however, exceptions. A
particularly striking illustration of an exception to the rule is provided
by the dispute over medical marijuana laws. Currently, eight states feature
laws that allow physicians to prescribe marijuana to patients to relieve
pain from conditions ranging from glaucoma to cancer to AIDS.

The federal government in general, and the Bush administration in
particular, has taken the position that since there is no federal law
permitting doctors to prescribe marijuana for medical purposes, people who
supply or possess marijuana legally under state laws for medical purposes
should be prosecuted under federal law. This is not a rational defensible
position.

Under federal law, marijuana is categorized as a Schedule I drug, which
means that, according to federal government, it is both highly dangerous
and has no recognized medical use. Both of these claims are obviously
false, and the federal officials who are charged with carrying out the laws
that flow from this indefensible categorization of the drug are well aware
of that fact.

The argument that marijuana is both so dangerous and of so little medical
value that - unlike, say, morphine - it is something that doctors should
not have the professional discretion to administer to their patients is
beneath contempt. It is, in short, the kind of argument that fails what
lawyers refer to as "the red face test."

Marijuana is far less dangerous than the literally hundreds of prescription
drugs that can be ingested in fatal quantities (there has never been a
recorded case of someone dying and overdose of marijuana, and indeed as a
practical matter such a thing is physiologically impossible), and that are
far more addictive than cannabis. Furthermore, despite strenuous efforts of
the federal government to block scientific research regarding the potential
medical uses of marijuana, a great deal of evidence has accumulated in
recent years that accumulated in recent years that marijuana is an
effective - sometimes the most effective and least problematic - pain
killer for people suffering from a wide variety of serous and often
excruciatingly painful condition.

Given all this, it isn't surprising that several states have enacted laws
designed to offset the effect of the federal government's profoundly
irrational policies regarding the medical uses of marijuana. What is rather
surprising is the hypocrisy of the Bush administration's response. Now of
course only the terminally naive are surprised when politicians deal with
drug questions hypothetically. Even so, the depth of the current
administration's hypocrisy should perturb even the most cynical observer.

Even if we leave aside the utter irrationality of the federal government's
attitude toward medical marijuana use, the fact remains that federal
prosecutions of people acting who are acting perfectly legally under state
law when they use marijuana for medical purposes violates every principle
of states rights that George W. Bush has repeatedly pledged to uphold.
Indeed, when he has a presidential candidate Bush announced that he opposed
the precise policy that his own Justice Department and DEA are now carrying
out.

There is, needless to say, a rational explanation for all this. Although
the federal government's marijuana policy isn't rationally defensible,
politicians from presidents on down are terrified of the accusations that
they are soft on drugs. As absurd as that accusation is in the land
Budweiser and Percodan and mandatory prison sentences for millions of drug
offenders, its still carries enormous political power. The Bush
administration's policy on medical marijuana use seems clear: If values
such as democracy and federalism and common human decency happen to
conflict with the administration's policy, so much the worse for them.
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