Pubdate: Thu, 02 Dec 2004 Source: Nashville Scene (TN) Copyright: 2004 Nashville Scene. Contact: http://www.nashscene.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2409 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal) LET 'EM SMOKE No doubt some might think it heresy for us to suggest how Jesus himself would come down on the medical marijuana issue, which state Sen. Steve Cohenpromises to bring to the legislature in the new year. But we're going to do it anyway. Frankly, we think he'd offer a light to sick people who can't get pain relief any other way. Then he'd pull a roach clip from his robe so they could finish the joint without burning their fingers. We bring Jesus into this conversation because this is, after all, the Bible Belt, and opposition to Cohen's play for legalizing medical marijuana would come from religious conservatives and those who simply can't stop fighting the futile drug war. But precisely how some dying woman with cancer taking a hit while tucked in bed-just to stave off misery for a little while-would amount to wickedness and cultural degeneration is beyond us. We say let doctors and patients decide the best treatment for those whose symptoms are otherwise inconsolable. It's a medical issue. It should not be the business of government-especially the federal government-to decide who lives in pain and who doesn't. Considering the facts, this isn't all that controversial a position. Studies show medical marijuana is legitimate, and by some estimates as many as 80 percent of Americans support doctor-prescribed pot. Ten states have passed laws to make medical marijuana legal. And just two weeks ago, Democratic U.S. Sen. Richard Durbin introduced a bipartisan Senate bill that would allow patients in states where medical marijuana is legal to mount a medical necessity defense in federal court, countering prosecution efforts to present them as common dime-bag criminals. That we even need this federal intervention is frightening. But as it is, federal law defines marijuana as a substance without "accepted medical use," which means defendants are gagged from demonstrating at trial that their marijuana use was medicinal and/or in compliance with state law. (There's clearly a compelling states' rights issue here too.) "We cannot sit back passively as the federal government wages war on the sick and dying," the Marijuana Policy Project's Steve Fox recently wrote in a letter to supporters. "It is time to increase pressure on Congress to pass legislation that will protect patients who legitimately require medical marijuana." In Tennessee, politicians as politically divergent as Al Gore and Lamar Alexander have supported its use. Gore told reporters in 1999 that his sister was prescribed pot when she underwent chemotherapy in 1984. Her doctor was the former head of the American Lung Association, hardly some nut job without credibility. And when Alexander was governor, he signed a law making medical marijuana, provided by the federal government for state research programs, legal in Tennessee (though that law was repealed in 1992). Now Cohen is on the march, saying he's seen too many of his friends suffer the ghastly side effects of cancer treatments. We can hear the debate on the state Senate floor now-that is, if the bill even makes it to the floor. Lawmakers will stand up and offer testament about their addiction problems, they'll say such a law would set a bad example for kids, and they'll insist that there's no medical evidence to support marijuana's legalized use. And they'll be dead wrong. Finally, they'll invoke God-some for political exploitation, and others out of genuine belief that pot use is inherently unchristian. We won't be so presumptuous as to malign these God-fearing folks. But we can say with utter confidence that if they really believe He would frown on the compassionate legalization of pot, then we don't know the same God. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek