Pubdate: Sun, 19 Oct 2003 Source: Pilot, The (NC) Copyright: 2003 The Pilot LLC Contact: http://www.thepilot.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1701 Author: Dusty Rhoades Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal) SUPREMES WERE RIGHT ON MARIJUANA ISSUE Just for the record, and despite what you may hear from right-wing talk radio, marijuana, medical or otherwise, has not been suddenly legalized by the Supreme Court. On Tuesday, however, the Supremes did decline to hear a challenge to a ruling by the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals. At issue was the government's threat to yank the federal permits doctors need to prescribe any controlled substance if the doctor even discussed the merits of using marijuana in treating the side effects of chemotherapy or the wasting effects of AIDS. First, you need to know a little something about marijuana. It does amazing things to the appetite. A person who's smoked a few joints can find a plate of cold Spaghetti-O's appealing. Or so I've heard. So if you're down to 85 pounds because your chemo is making you sick (like a lady named Judith Cushner who's a plaintiff in the lawsuit) or if AIDS is making you too nauseous to eat so that you risk starving to death (like Plaintiff Keith Vines who is, ironically enough, an assistant district attorney in San Francisco), then an appetite stimulant and nausea inhibitor might be just what the doctor ordered. Problem is, nature's most effective appetite stimulant is illegal. So, in 1996, the people of California voted in Proposition 215, which made it legal for patients to grow and possess marijuana for medical use when a doctor recommends it. Arizona passed a similar law by referendum. The Clinton administration, that pack of pot-smoking liberals, came down on that one like a ton of bricks. First off, they said, anyone growing or distributing marijuana would be prosecuted, no matter what those stupid voters of California or Arizona think. That part of the policy was upheld by the Supreme Court. Then, however, they went further and banned doctors from even discussing the matter with their patients. "A doctor's action in recommending or prescribing Schedule I controlled substances is not consistent with the public interest," the policy said. A joint letter from a veritable alphabet soup of agencies, including the Department of Justice, the Department of Health and Human Services, and for some bizarre reason, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, warned that doctors who violate the policy "risk revocation of their DEA prescription authority." Note that the communication involved doesn't even have to rise to the level of writing a prescription.a statement that "hey, I hear marijuana can help you with that" would risk the doctor getting his DEA ticket pulled. Since the DEA license is necessary to prescribe a whole raft of useful and legal drugs, this was the guvmint basically threatening to put docs out of business for not toeing the party line in the debate on the usefulness of marijuana as a treatment. Not the Clinton Administration's finest hour, I'll admit. The Bushistas, to no one's great surprise, continued the policy when they took over. So Cushner, Vines, and AIDS pioneer Dr. Marcus Conant took the government to court and won. The 9th Circuit ruled that threatening doctors if they provided any medical opinion other than "marijuana is bad, bad, bad" was a violation of the First Amendment's right of free speech. The government appealed to the Supreme Court, who did - nothing. They refused to consider the appeal. The media and the White House, predictably, made it sounds as if weed was going to start being sold over the counter in Eckerd's along with the Preparation H. "Supreme Court clears the way for Medical Pot" blared the AP headline. "We oppose the legalization of marijuana," a White House spokesman said. Which was fine, except that it really had little to do with the true import of the decision. This was more - much more - than a drug issue. There's a lot of debate, both medical and political, about the medical usefulness or lack of usefulness of marijuana. Stifling that debate by trying to dictate doctor-patient communication isn't going to make the issue go away. As the 9th Circuit pointed out, a doctor's expression of opinion on the "pro" side of the issue isn't aiding and abetting a felony. It doesn't mean that the patient is going to rush down to the corner and buy a dime bag or whatever they're selling the stuff in these days. The patient may rush out and join one of the organizations lobbying for a change in our drug policy. He may go home and cry over the unfairness of it all. He may write a letter to the editor. But at least he was able to discuss it with his doctor, without the fear that the doctor may not be there next week. The Supremes made the right decision here. - --- MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager