Pubdate: Fri, 11 Dec 2009 Source: Morning Call (Allentown, PA) Copyright: 2009 The Morning Call Inc. Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/DReo9M8z Website: http://www.mcall.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/275 Author: Paul Carpenter Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v09/n1082/a04.html Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal) REACTIONS REVEAL DOUBLE STANDARD According to the president of the board of the Child Advocacy Center of Lehigh County, it is wrong "to revile a government employee who is struggling successfully with his addiction and in fact should be cited as a shining example of what someone with an addiction should do." J. Layne Turner, wrote Barbara Stoffa, "is well thought of where he works" at a top job in the county's Drug and Alcohol agency. (Stoffa is the retired head of another agency and is the wife of Northampton County Executive John Stoffa.) "Just what is the point of attacking someone ... who is successfully mastering his addiction?" Stoffa asked." If you saw someone who recently had a cast removed from a broken leg, would you kick that leg just to see if it is indeed healed?" That referred to Sunday's column, in which I ridiculed a drug and alcohol survey distributed by Turner. I also noted Turner's previous problems with the law, stemming from what he blamed on drinking heavily and using drugs, although he got his rap sheet wiped clean by getting accepted into the court system's accelerated rehabilitative disposition program. "Putting [Turner] in charge of a drug and alcohol program would be like hiring an arsonist as your fire chief," I wrote. "What personal and shaming behaviors of yours should be printed in your paper?" Stoffa demanded, "or are you inadvertently revealing them as you write." I responded by asking her "what sort of Freudian slip on my part" let the cat out of the bag about my shameful past. But mainly, I wanted to ask a hypothetical question. "If this had been a case of a man previously charged with sexual assaults on children," I e-mailed, "and he managed to get ARD by blubbering about how sorry he was, would you be in favor of giving him a government job where he has authority over children?" "No," Stoffa acknowledged, but she denied "there is any comparability in the two scenarios." I greatly respect Stoffa, but I think my comparison is pithy. It's preposterous to argue that the best people to help drug and alcohol abusers are other drug and alcohol abusers, reformed or otherwise. That's like saying the best people to fix your plumbing are those with a history of being unable to fix their own leaks. I do not think double standards are appropriate anywhere, and I think people with alcohol and other drug problems cause as much harm as sex maniacs. At the same time, I strongly feel that once people have been cleared of wrongdoing, or have paid their debts to society, they should be allowed to get on with their lives, perhaps even in government jobs. I'd have no problem if the county hired Turner to paint lines on a road, or to fix county plumbing. But there must be somebody out there who, based on past performance, is better qualified to tell others what's what regarding drugs and alcohol. It has been quite a week for reactions to what I've said about drugs, including last Friday's column urging the decriminalization of marijuana for medical purposes. A deluge of responses included several noting that the American Medical Association opposes the therapeutic use of marijuana (although the AMA retreated a bit from its medieval stance last month). The AMA represents a trillion-dollar-a-year enterprise and if, say, 1 percent of patients are allowed to switch to something they can grow in their own yards, it could put a $10 billion hole in medical industry profits. So anybody gullible enough to believe anything the AMA says about pot probably would buy the Brooklyn Bridge. My favorite response came from a man who grew up in Catasauqua but now lives in California, one of 13 states that allow possession and use of small amounts of marijuana for valid medical purposes. He asked that I withhold his name because he fears his employer in the Bay Area may not be as enlightened as the voters who enacted California's Prop 215 law in 1996. "I suffer from an autoimmune form of arthritis that causes my immune system to attack my joints for no particular reason," the Catty native wrote. "This condition is extremely debilitating and painful." He has been allowed to treat his symptoms with marijuana instead of with opiates and other prescription drugs that have horrible risks and side effects. "I have long been concerned for family members and friends still living in the Lehigh Valley who do not have this choice," he said. "These people represent a segment of our population that are ... persecuted by the draconian drug laws that you highlighted so eloquently in your article." We eloquent types think that drunks and other drug abusers are not the best people to be in positions of authority over others when it comes those same problems, but I'd be happy to exempt those who used marijuana to relieve the horrors of illnesses. If that represents a double standard on my part, so be it. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D