Pubdate: Sun, 21 Oct 2007 Source: Week, The (Delavan, WI) Copyright: 2007 Bliss Communications Inc. Contact: http://www.theweekextra.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4606 Author: Bernard Dalsey LET THE PATIENTS DECIDE FOR THEMSELVES I'm bipartisan in my criticisms of politicians, depending on the issue. Republican Rep. Leah Vukmir, chair of WI Assembly's health-care committee, refuses to give a hearing to a bill legalizing medical marijuana in our state. The current bill has several Democratic sponsors and just one Republican. But again this year, such legislation will likely not get an up-or-down vote by our elected representatives. My mother-in-law is in her final months of a several year battle with lung cancer. Hospice workers have provided her morphine if needed. Should she be denied morphine out of objection to the drug being legal in general? What a lack of compassion that would be! When Lyn Nofziger of the Reagan Administration provided marijuana to his daughter to fight the side effects of chemotherapy, he wasn't arguing that marijuana should be legal. But he understood the value of the plant in fighting nausea and generating appetite. We have become a very callous society in many ways. Pharmaceutical companies do not want marijuana legal for medical usage, just as they do not want many herbs on the market. I say, let those with glaucoma, MS, AIDS, cancer, etc. make their own decisions. Shame on us when we fail to show compassion! Where are the Republicans on less government interference and not restricting patient choices on the issue of medical marijuana? It's bad when politicians have no notion of liberty and personal responsibility. It's worse when it causes harm to people. The "war on drugs" costs over $50 billion a year. It takes law enforcement away from fighting rapists and child molesters. It encourages robberies as addicts to hard drugs steal to pay for their illegal habits. It wastes our tax dollars. When it prevents sick people from finding some relief, then it is completely insane and inhumane. Bernard Dalsey Whitewater