Pubdate: Mon, 08 Sep 2003
Source: National Review (US)
Copyright: 2003 National Review
Contact:  http://www.nationalreview.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/287
Author: Rich Lowry
Cited: Office of National Drug Control Policy (
www.whitehousedrugpolicy.gov )
Cited: National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws (
www.norml.org )
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?115 (Cannabis - California)
Note: Rich Lowry is author of the upcoming Legacy: Paying the Price for the
Clinton Years.

TERMINATOR ON POT

Schwarzenegger Is Sound On Marijuana.

Arnold Schwarzenegger's 1977 interview with the now-defunct pornographic
magazine Oui is not recommended reading for anyone without a strong stomach for
vulgarity. But the interview helps explain the soundness of one of the actor's
public-policy positions.

Schwarzenegger smoked marijuana, enjoyed it and still managed to become an
ambitious, intelligent actor and businessman who built a sterling career for
himself. This must give him a healthy skepticism for the unthinking hostility
toward marijuana that infects our political culture and drives the federal
government's lunatic campaign against the drug, as if anyone who ever tries it
is doomed to become a stoner.

The flash point in the marijuana wars at the moment is the fight over the
medical use of the drug. Schwarzenegger is in favor of legalizing it, as are
most Californians. The state passed a ballot initiative permitting the medical
use of marijuana with 55 percent of the vote in 1996. Eight other states have
legalized it as well, creating friction with the feds, who don't want
grievously ill patients to get relief if it means taking the untoward expedient
of lighting a joint.

Of course, if the congressmen who maintain the federal prohibition on medical
marijuana had to put their heads in toilet bowls several times a day to vomit
from the effects of chemotherapy, they might be less categorical in condemning
what some patients do to relieve their nausea. But the federal government has
never been famous for its common sense or flexibility, so the war against
medical marijuana lumbers on, even in the states that have legalized it.

Since the feds systematically suppress attempts to study the potential medical
benefits of marijuana, the most important datum in the debate is simply this:
Some patients say smoking marijuana is the best way that they can get relief
from the nausea associated with chemotherapy and the wasting illness associated
with HIV/AIDS. Smoking the drug works better for some patients than Marinol
pills, which contain pure THC and have more side effects.

The New England Journal of Medicine has advocated the legalization of medical
marijuana. In May, the journal Lancet Neurology reported that marijuana's
active components alleviate pain in almost every lab test, and called it
potentially "the aspirin of the 21st century." Earlier this year, the New York
State Association of County Health Officials came out in favor of medical
marijuana.

The ill health effects of marijuana come from inhaling the smoke into the
lungs. This isn't a problem if the use is only short-term, or if the user has a
terminal disease. Consumer Reports (no less) writes "that for patients with
advanced AIDS and terminal cancer, the apparent benefits some derive from
smoking marijuana outweigh any substantiated or even suspected risks."

Drug warriors worry that permitting medical marijuana "sends the wrong message"
to teenagers. But the popularity of various drugs among youth moves in broad
patterns that are not readily influenced by what federal "drug czar" John
Walters says or does. And the fact is that -- God bless them -- cancer and AIDS
patients aren't glamorous, and are unlikely to prompt an epidemic of youth pot
smoking.

Might medical marijuana be abused? Of course. That's also true of a host of
prescription drugs. But don't tell Walters. Next he will be trying to deny
patients the use of morphine and OxyContin.

What drug warriors really fear is that if medical marijuana is permitted, it
will harm their effort to depict marijuana as utterly nefarious and create the
opening for a more rational debate about the legal status of the drug. The drug
warriors are already losing ground. The National Organization for the Reform of
Marijuana Laws recently celebrated a vote in Congress that had 152 members
voting to ease the federal crackdown on medical marijuana.

That's progress, although the cause still needs a high-profile spokesman. If it
happens to be a formerly swinging California bodybuilder who enjoyed the 1970s
a little too much, so be it.