Pubdate: Fri, 18 May 2001 Source: Journal Tribune (ME) Copyright: 2001 Journal Tribune Contact: http://www.journaltribune.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1074 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal) MARIJUANA PRESCRIPTION State Should Work For Federal Law To Allow Legal Distribution Of Drug Maine legislators are taking another, hesitant look at the question of marijuana distribution under the state's medical marijuana law following this week's ruling by the U.S. Supreme Court. Justices struck down California's system of selling pot through cooperatives, meaning a bill to set up a state distribution system in Maine could be doomed. Or not. Varying interpretations of the ruling have been offered from various quarters and will be debated in coming weeks. Gov. Angus King is expected to veto the distribution bill if it gets as far as his desk. The official hesitation is understandable. The Supreme Court's unanimous ruling seems to have thrown cold water on the whole medical marijuana business, with Justice Clarence Thomas declaring that pot's medical value has never been scientifically proven and that barring proof, the drug must remain illegal. What the state should not do now is cave in. The court didn't tell states to begin arresting patients who use small amounts of marijuana to ease nausea from chemotherapy, to calm muscle spasms from multiple sclerosis, or to restore appetite lost to the AIDS virus. Someday patients' stories of success using marijuana for those purposes might be proven to the satisfaction of Justice Thomas but until then, the stories can't be ignored. One York County doctor said he has written several permission slips for patients seeking relief from extreme pain and nausea through marijuana. It's not that he's seen scientific proof of the drug's value, he said, just that he believes his patients and feels for them. We could be waiting a long time to get mainstream scientific proof of marijuana's medicinal value. Most research is paid for by pharmaceutical companies that hope eventually to profit from a drug's safe use or by the government. Drug companies are unlikely to make money off a substance that can be grown in the back yard, and the federal government seems too busy lumping marijuana in with more harmful substances to further its medicinal use. Maine should continue to study its options for distribution so that doctors don't have to continue to give their patients such vague advice as "use pot if it helps, but I have no idea how you'll find it." The basis for Maine's 1999 medical marijuana law is compassion. The drug can ease suffering for a small minority of residents who use it. The suffering hasn't gone away, nor the potential benefit, simply because of the opinions of eight justices in Washington. Maine should lobby for a change in federal law that would allow legal distribution. And it should continue to let compassion be its guide on this issue. - --- MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager