Pubdate: 23 May 2001 Source: Berkshire Eagle, The (MA) Copyright: 2001 New England Newspapers, Inc. Contact: http://www.berkshireeagle.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/897 TURNING BACK THE CLOCK ON MARIJUANA The debate over medical use of marijuana has been, up until last week, helpfully dispassionate and generally informed. That marijuana relieves some symptoms or side effects of certain difficult ailments (weight loss accompanying AIDS, glaucoma, among others) seems to be accepted by most medical authorities. Therefore, the U.S. Supreme Court helped not a bit last week when it decreed that there was no known medical benefit for the narcotic, and, in effect, that it should not be considered for any federal programs. The trouble with the decision was that it immediately brought out the extremists on both sides. The people who had held that it was at worst addictive or at best a "gateway" drug, the use of which can lead to addiction, said, in effect, "We told you so all along; now let's put people in jail for smoking pot." Those on the other side, who have been calling for legalization of marijuana and other narcotics, could now brand their opponents as know-nothings. The issue the justices were deciding was the legality of a California cooperative which bought marijuana in bulk for pharmaceutical purposes under state law. Since a federal prosecution was involved, the 8-0 ruling applied only to federal law and did not rule out a movement that has already passed medical marijuana ballot initiatives in eight states. But the blanket opinion written by Justice Clarence Thomas inserted the court into the field of medicine, a sorcerer's apprentice move which will be a long time sorting itself out. Justice Thomas' statement that the drug "has no currently accepted medical use in treatment in the United States" was couched in the language of politics, not of law. This promises to chill the rational dialogue that was increasingly centered around future control -- desirable legal restrictions on the who, what, where, when and why of the drug's sale. Areas were being opened up where reasonable folk could agree or disagree without many of the old passions and prejudices . Perhaps that is why the arch-conservative, politically-oriented jurist made the statement -- so the nation could turn back the clock. The new Supreme Court, since last autumn's dramatic realignment in the wake of the disputed Florida election, is far more politicized than it ever has been, with four moderates on one side opposing five conservatives on the other. A hot-button issue like medical marijuana will certainly -- and sadly -- add to the politicization. In this case, the smoke is the fire, and justice will continue its drift into oblivion unless one or two of the conservative justices sense the clear and present danger. - --- MAP posted-by: Andrew