Pubdate: Fri, 06 Aug 2004
Source: Providence Journal, The (RI)
Copyright: 2004 The Providence Journal Company
Contact:  http://www.projo.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/352
Author: Bob Kerr
Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v04/n1116/a04.html
Cited: Kirk Muse http://www.mapinc.org/writers/Kirk+Muse
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal)

IT'S TIME TO ADMIT THE GOOD SIDE

People with multiple sclerosis use it to get through the day. So do people 
with AIDS, cancer and posttraumatic stress disorder.

People trying to break their addiction to alcohol turn to it when they feel 
they can't make it through the next two minutes without a drink.

Doctors recommend it, although they can't prescribe it.

And some police who arrest people for it admit that their time could be 
better spent.

It helps some people in ways that are not totally explained. But those who 
suffer don't need explanations. They need relief. So they make a connection 
and buy marijuana and break the law. They put their stash in a safe place 
that's easy to get to when the pain, fear or anxiety closes in.

Waging war on hard drugs might still be justifiable but the war on 
marijuana seems a waste of time and effort.

As long as marijuana is kept in the great grab bag of illegal drugs and not 
considered a fairly benign substance with the potential to help ill people, 
it will continue to claim time and money and resources that could be best 
used elsewhere.

And it will continue to be called on as some kind of moral barometer by 
those who still subscribe to the laughable Reefer Madness view of its mind 
altering power.

Even now, people running for public office will be asked if they ever 
smoked it. It is a pointless question that has nothing to do with 
character. It indicates little more than whether a candidate has led a 
normal life and dealt with normal temptations.

Bill Clinton's idiotic line about trying it but not inhaling only adds to 
marijuana's ability to bring out the silly and the absurd on the campaign 
trail, as well as other places.

Don't get me wrong. I'm not advocating recreational pot use in the sixth 
grade. Dealing drugs, even marijuana, to children is a low-down thing to do.

The Burrillville police apparently did a great job with an undercover 
investigation into drug dealing aimed at high school students. They busted 
nine people and confiscated the usual stuff -- cash, cars, bags of 
marijuana, scales.

The police say the investigation is ongoing. It will probably take more 
people out of circulation who should be out of circulation.

But the bust won't change much except, perhaps, the local price structure.

There was an interesting letter to the editor in The Journal yesterday from 
an intriguingly named reader in Mesa, Ariz., Kirk Muse. He was responding 
to another marijuana bust in another town when he wrote "Without marijuana 
busts, marijuana would be worth what other easy-to-grow weeds are worth -- 
very little.

"Thanks to the Drug Enforcement Administration and other 'drug warriors,' 
the easy-to-grow weed is worth more than pure gold -- and completely tax 
free. The marijuana users or sellers arrested will soon be replaced; they 
always are."

I get the feeling Mr. Muse writes a lot of letters to editors about 
marijuana, but he is right. Marijuana has been made a cash crop because the 
war on drugs demands that it be portrayed as entirely bad, a gateway drug 
to harder, meaner stuff. Its ability to help sick people is ignored because 
that only blurs the hard-hitting message.

It doesn't make any sense. Marijuana should be separated from hard drugs 
and controlled in a way that would make it available to ease some pain.

Then people I know with MS and posttraumatic stress disorder would not have 
to worry about getting caught in the random bust on their way home from 
buying the one thing that gets them through the day.
- ---
MAP posted-by: Richard Lake