Pubdate: Fri, 30 Mar 2001 Source: News-Sentinel (IN) Copyright: 2001 The News-Sentinel Contact: http://www.fortwayne.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1077 Author: Leo Morris Note: Leo Morris for the editorial board THE GORED-OX EFFECT It's interesting how people will often abandon an apparently strongly held philosophical position when it collides with a real-world issue they care deeply about. Over here, we have the left, passionately committed to the federal government's wisdom and largesse, especially when it comes to support of "the arts." But then comes Congress, saying libraries and schools that won't put approved Internet "filters" on their computers won't qualify for federal help in getting connected to the Internet. Outrageous! howls the left. This is an issue on which local people have the "expertise" to know how best to control what children have access to -- there is no federal "role." And over there, we have the right, which distrusts the federal government and thinks states and local communities should have more power to decide their own fates. But then come a few states, led by California, that want to pass laws allowing for the medicinal use of marijuana. Unacceptable! thunders the right. Why, this is just an attempt to circumvent the marijuana prohibition so that everybody can use that dangerous, evil drug. Besides, these are federal statues involved here -- the states have no right to supersede the mighty central government. It's worth noting, on the filtering issue, that no one seems to be arguing that children should have unrestricted access to everything. The only question is who is best able to determine what they should see and how best to get the job done. And none of the marijuana-as-treatment opponents seem willing to argue that the drug should never be permitted for legitimate medical needs. They merely argue that there is no such thing as a legitimate medical need -- anything marijuana can do, a legal drug can do better. Of course, the marijuana proponents have doctors who testify otherwise, so logic would dictate that the question bears further investigation. In fact, a clear appraisal of both issues, rather than an attempt to determine whose ox is being gored, would suggest that these are areas where the evidence is likely to become less clear the more accumulated knowledge is left unexamined. On Internet access and marijuana access alike, there are legitimate opinions on both sides. Let the debates continue -- and the federal government tread lightly. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart