Pubdate: Fri, 06 Jun 2003 Source: San Francisco Examiner (CA) Copyright: 2003 San Francisco Examiner Contact: http://www.examiner.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/389 Author: J. K. Dineen, Of The Examiner Staff Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Ed+Rosenthal RECOVERY PLAN The day after the medical pot community celebrated convicted marijuana grower Ed Rosenthal's one-day sentence, a top Bush administration official came through town to offer the sort of stern condemnation of medical marijuana widespread among Washington Republicans but not often heard in this city. Dr. Andrea Grubb Barthwell, President Bush's Deputy Director of Demand Reduction at the Office of National Drug Control Policy, called marijuana an "elixir" and compared it to smoking opium as a cure for pain. "It's really, really unfortunate that people look at that and believe that smoke-weed can help them as medicine," she said. "It is silly, even outrageous to suggest that a smoke-weed is medicine and that it would be more efficacious than other forms of medications that have been developed over time." She called the medicinal marijuana movement "a smokescreen for another agenda" and said Rosenthal message was never really about pot for the ill. "This is not about marijuana as a medicine," she said. "This is about an individual who has gone on the record with a program to legalize marijuana." Barthwell's comments were made at the Asian-American Recovery Services treatment center in the Western Addition, which she praised as the sort of culturally sensitive drug treatment center the Bush administration favors. She also outlined Bush's $600 million "Access To Recovery" program, a voucher system that would give recovering addicts the freedom to choose the suitable program most suitable for their addiction. The presentation was preceded by accounts of several San Franciscans who had found sobriety at AARS. Graduate Melvin Kon said he was living in Tenderloin hotels and was addicted to a gamut of drugs - from weed to coke to speed - when a judge gave him a choice between jail and a residential treatment program. He had been arrested between 20 and 30 times. "I definitely made the right move," he said. "I'm so grateful for this place." As a Japanese-American Kon said he basically ignored his family during 20 years of addiction. "I choose to hide out rather than deal with it," he said. "It's an Asian thing, you feel you have to keep quiet about it because the family name is at stake." Stated 17 years ago, AARS was the first recovery program to target Asian and Pacific Islander communities, long stereotyped as "model minorities" unencumbered by the sort of a serious drug addiction problems other groups wrestle with. AARS has both residential treatment programs and outpatient services as well as youth intervention programs. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake