Pubdate: Thu, 06 Jul 2000 Source: Journal Gazette (IN) Copyright: 2000 Journal Gazette Contact: 600 W. Main Street, Ft. Wayne, IN. 46802 Fax: (219) 461-8648 Feedback: http://www.jg.net/jg/emailform2.htm Website: http://www.jg.net/jg/ Related: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v00/n972/a06.html LET STATES DECIDE ABOUT MEDICAL MARIJUANA U.S. Rep. Mark Souder betrays his conservative roots by seeking to pass federal legislation prohibiting states from allowing medical use of marijuana. States' rights is a bedrock principle of conservatism. Conservatives like Souder often trumpet states' rights when the federal government mandates a more socially liberal policy than state laws set. It should be no different when states act to give residents more individual liberties than federal law, particularly when the voters of a state directly establish the law through a referendum. Souder insults voters in the seven states who passed referendums allowing medical use when he suggests they didn't understand what they were approving. Voters today are better informed than ever. They knew what they were doing. The congressman further demeans voters when he says their votes were bought by billionaire George Soros, who financed campaigns backing the medical use votes. Is Souder suggesting that anyone with enough money can win a state referendum? If so, state laws regulating guns wouldn't be on the books because the powerful and well-financed gun lobby would push referendums removing restrictions on gun ownership. And that doesn't explain Hawaii, where the legislature - not referendum voters - voted to allow medical marijuana use. Finally, Souder belittles the suffering incurred by cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy when he states that medical marijuana laws are "just a phony excuse to be a pot head." States that legalize medical marijuana can establish strict guidelines limiting use to relieving pain and promoting appetite in people with severe medical conditions. Souder insists his proposal only clarifies that federal law already prohibits states from allowing medical use of marijuana, but that view is not universally accepted. Lawyers for the California legislature, for example, studied the issue and saw no conflict with federal law for voters there to allow medical use of the drug. Judges, police, medical professionals - even lawmakers - are coming to realize that the nation's drug problem is extremely complex and won't be solved by simple laws that throw all drug users in prison. Federal action - either by law or court rulings - is often needed to correct unjust state laws, particularly those that run counter to the Constitution. But members of Congress should not use federal law to restrict individual liberties granted by a state. On this issue, the true conservative approach is best. Give states and cities the flexibility they need to recognize that marijuana is not cocaine or heroin, and cancer sufferers are not the same as recreational drug users. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D