Pubdate: Mon, 01 Dec 2008 Source: Chicago Flame (IL Edu) Copyright: 2008 Chicago Flame Contact: http://www.chicagoflame.com/home/lettertotheeditor/ Website: http://www.chicagoflame.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4602 Author: Alecks Kim Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization) LET OUR PATIENTS TOKE In November's election, Michigan became the thirteenth state of the United States to legalize medical marijuana, defying federal law in the Controlled Substances Act of 1970, which classifies "marihuana" as a Class I drug. When Congress passed this act, it audaciously declared cannabis to have a high potential for abuse, a lack of acceptable safety in use, and no medical value. Meanwhile, they scheduled cocaine - - a drug which had caused countless deaths, was known to be dangerously addictive and involved in international organized crime - as a Class II drug. Apparently, the venerable usage of marijuana in medicine was spurious compared to cocaine's highly limited utility in certain anesthetic applications (in which the highly toxic drug can often be replaced by safer medications anyways). Ever since then, groups like NORML have called upon Congress to rethink marijuana's scheduling as the large body of (now legally difficult to conduct, yet persevering) medical research involving cannabis continues to grow. We've all heard by now that this humble little shrub can be used to alleviate chronic pain, nausea, asthma and glaucoma. AIDS sufferers and chemotherapy patients often make the news after federal agents seize their medical marijuana and arrest their suppliers. But the almost miraculous-seeming pharmacological array present in these plants has been revealed to offer much more to modern medicine. It has slowed the growth of lung tumors and decreased hardening of the arteries in lab rats and mice. Just this past summer, certain compounds from marijuana were shown to be able to kill the MRSA superbug, which is difficult to treat with current antibiotics. To keep medical marijuana illegal is to be contemptuous of science and our patients. Time and time again, marijuana has been shown to be safe and effective. Yet in 2004 Merck had to pull its anti-inflamatory drug Vioxx from the market after it killed an FDA-estimated 27,000. Surely if we allow such insufficiently tested drugs to be sold to the public, a plant that had been deemed by multiple authorities to be less dangerous than alcohol is safe enough. Our legislation regarding marijuana must have been authored by individuals who were either highly irrational, or let their offense at the youth culture and its attack on their generation's entrenched mores supercede expert medical opinion. And indeed, after the National Commission on Marijuana and Drug Abuse relseased its report in 1973 stating that with zero related fatalities and zero linked deviancy or drug abuse, marijuana should be decriminalized, President Nixon regarded it as rubbish, even though he himself had appointed nine of the thirteen commissioners to skew their findings. Of course, just because our current marijuana policy is highly politicized and moralistic, doesn't mean that it can't be changed to be more compassionate and medically sound. More than a dozen states and their voters have disregarded and undermined cannabis' schedule by Congress in demanding marijuana for their patients. So I say this to anyone with a speck of empathy in their hearts: please show some compassion to our patients, and let them have cannabis. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin