Pubdate: Wed, 16 Dec 2009 Found: Wed Dec 16 08:39:22 2009 PST Source: Vernon Broadcaster (Viroqua, WI) Contact: 2009 The Vernon Broadcaster Website: http://www.vernonbroadcaster.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4818 Author: Matt Johnson, managing editor Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?253 (Cannabis - Medicinal - United States) MEDICAL MARIJUANA SHOULD BE ALLOWED After examining information from both sides of the debate, it's clear that marijuana is a useful medication that can aid suffering people and the time has come for the state of Wisconsin to allow marijuana to be prescribed as medicine. On Tuesday the Wisconsin State Legislature's combined health committee was holding a hearing to listen to advocates seeking to have medical marijuana legalized in this state. The "Jacki Rickert Medical Marijuana Act Hearings" included many stories from people who suffer from cancer, AIDS, glaucoma and other physical ailments that are improved or eased by the use of cannabis. Medical marijuana is not about people "getting high" or anything that goes along with stereotypical recreational drug use. Marijuana, if abused, is a harmful drug. Granted, it's less harmful than alcohol or tobacco, but it's a drug none-the-less and under existing laws its possession, manufacture and distribution should be investigated and prosecuted. Law enforcement officers making marijuana arrests are doing their job. However, after examining all of the arguments against medical marijuana, they don't nearly equal the positives that come with cannabis when used as medicine. It allows cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy to eat. It also returns the appetite to patients suffering from full-blown AIDS. Furthermore, it eases the pain and pressure on the eyes of patients suffering from glaucoma. There are many other documented legitimate medical uses for cannabis. A well-regulated medical marijuana distribution program in Wisconsin is a necessity. Advocating for medical marijuana isn't without its pitfalls. How do you tell kids that smoking pot is bad when you advocate for medical marijuana? Well, that's an issue that deals with perception. Nobody would say that morphine is good for a healthy human being. However, it is appropriate to prescribe morphine for someone with an acute, painful injury or someone suffering the late stages of a terminal illness. Marijuana's healing abilities shouldn't be dismissed due to perception. While some people will say that synthetic or other pharmaceutical alternatives to cannabis are equally as effective, the truth is that overwhelming patient anecdotes show they are not. The bottom line is that people who are suffering from physical afflictions that can be eased by the use of cannabis should not have to do anything illegal to ease their pain. A claim in the legislature, Tuesday, that the fight for medical marijuana was a ploy to legalize the drug, was reactionary. This argument is about helping people who are ill - nothing more. The state of Wisconsin should join the 13 other states in the nation that have allowed for the use of medical marijuana. There is no substitute for this medicine. The excuses for continuing to keep its medicinal use illegal are not compelling. - --- MAP posted-by: Doug