Pubdate: Mon, 02 Aug 2010
Source: Daily Cardinal (U of WI, Madison, Edu)
Copyright: 2010 The Daily Cardinal Newspaper Corporation
Contact:  http://dailycardinal.com
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/712
Author: Dan Tollefson

WISCONSIN WOULD BENEFIT FROM MEDICINAL-MARIJUANA LEGISLATION

Currently, fourteen states across the nation allow the use of
medicinal marijuana as a treatment for various illnesses. For cancer
patients, marijuana is used to remedy the terrible nausea that follows
chemotherapy. In people affected by glaucoma, the sticky icky has been
shown to reduce irritating intraocular eye pressure. Even for people
with AIDS, pot stimulates appetite in order to reverse the
debilitating effects of wasting syndrome.

For having such undeniable treatment potential, marijuana gets a
tremendously bad rap from an overwhelming population of older
conservatives. While a growing number of states recently began to
weigh the pros and cons of pot, the super-conservative sector of our
society has been unjustly demonizing marijuana for ages. Apparently,
this pot-blocking trend finally hit a road block right here in
Wisconsin. A few weeks ago, the Dane County Board of Supervisors voted
unanimously to allow an advisory referendum to be placed on the
election ballot this November that reads: "Should the Wisconsin
Legislature enact legislation allowing residents with debilitating
medical conditions to acquire and possess marijuana for medical
purposes if supported by their physician?"

If the Dane County referendum were to pass, it would have a negligible
effect in and of itself. Simply by passing, it would not actually
allow the use of medicinal marijuana in Dane County, nor would it have
any legal implications for the next legislative session. Rather, it
would be used as an indication to state legislators that the public is
in favor of introducing legislation that allows medicinal marijuana in
Wisconsin.

To much of the public, marijuana is viewed as a gateway drug to the
use of more potentially harmful drugs. Unfortunately, the argument is
a weak one. As we all know, correlation does not equal causation, and
the idea of labeling marijuana as a "gateway drug" relies too heavily
on exposure, location and setting of use. If grandma is smoking pot in
the kitchen to treat her glaucoma, it's not that likely she's cooking
little Johnny meth for lunch, too. Personally, whenever my path has
crossed with marijuana, it's never lead to me being exposed to any
"harder" drugs, with the exception of alcohol. At the same time, I've
never seen marijuana used as a treatment for anything other than boredom.

But that's true for just about any drug used to treat an
illness-unless you're the user, or in the immediate family, you
probably won't see the positives or negatives from a drug-prescription
or otherwise. That's the crux of the issue in the marijuana debate;
medicine consumed on an individual basis just doesn't affect the
average person outside of the household. If the detrimental side
effects-and they are limited, vague and widely disputed-don't outweigh
its treatment potential and don't affect a majority of the public,
then withholding the drug is only a disservice to those with sicknesses.

While helping the sick is always a priority for public officials, the
statewide implications of medicinal marijuana extend beyond its
treatment value. Not only is allowing the use of pot for medical
purposes beneficial to the ill, it's good for democracy. According to
a 2010 survey conducted by the Pew Research Center for the Public and
the Press, 73 percent of Americans are in favor of their state
allowing the use and sale of marijuana for medical purposes if
prescribed by a doctor. In the last few years, hundreds of studies
have drawn similar conclusions signaling a rise in the public
acceptance of medicinal marijuana. Since elected officials vote on
behalf of the people they represent, it only makes sense that the
Wisconsin legislature would propose policies allowing medicinal
marijuana if the voting public so indicated its preferences.

On the off chance that pro-pot legislation is enacted and medicinal
marijuana becomes legal at the state level, the question of
dispensaries used as distribution points arises. Purely from an
economic standpoint, pot dispensaries like those found in California
are a financial boon, not a burden. According to the California Board
of Equalization, medical marijuana and the dispensaries that ensued
generated $100 million in state sales tax per year. In a state facing
a $2.1 billion budget deficit at the start of the next legislative
session, any avenue heading toward reducing state debt without
increasing taxes or cutting spending is worth pursuing.

But dispensaries have their own implications. There exists a
hyper-hypothetical older crowd who claim that dispensaries are the
next step toward complete decriminalization of marijuana.

My question to them is, so what?

If marijuana is completely decriminalized, dealers and consumers alike
would stay out of jail, easing the skyrocketing public funding needed
to house criminals. Especially because Wisconsin focuses so heavily on
the rising costs of boarding prisoners when compared to its
surrounding states, by releasing all marijuana-related inmates, the
state can save thousands-if not millions-in the long run. Then again,
supposedly everyone would be high, but let's save that debate for
another day.

The likelihood of Wisconsin legalizing medical marijuana in the near
future might be small. However, the Dane County Board of Supervisors
took a giant leap in the right direction by voting in favor of the
referendum. Asking the voting public for insight on such a
controversial topic is the right approach, and it is our civic duty to
respond come November. Whether or not the answer will have any
legislative implications, we will have to wait and see. 
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MAP posted-by: Jo-D