Pubdate: Tue, 07 Sep 2010 Source: Richmond Times-Dispatch (VA) Copyright: 2010 Media General Communications Holdings, LLC. Contact: http://www.timesdispatch.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/365 DRUGS: NEW SPICE Just as medical marijuana approaches the cusp of general acceptance -- the Department of Veterans Affairs has announced it will permit patients to smoke pot in states that allow it -- a synthetic form of the drug has gained popularity for recreational use, and states are scrambling to outlaw the new drug, variously known as spice, K2, and a few other terms. Peddled as novelty incense -- wink, wink -- spice consists of an herbal blend treated with synthetic cannabinoids. Poison-control centers have taken hundreds of reports of bad reactions, some of them in Virginia. Two young men in Blacksburg recently were hospitalized for vomiting and rapid heartbeat and (in one case) seizures. The designer drug has raised concern among state leaders, who remain opposed to even modest and sensible changes in drug policy: This year a House subcommittee quickly dispatched a measure to expand the use of medical marijuana, for instance, and dealt equally swift judgment against another bill to decriminalize marijuana possession. The hard-nosed approach seems to have had little effect on demand -- witness the huge stash discovered this summer in Caroline County -- and it's an open question whether going after pot users represents the best use of scarce law-enforcement resources. But as the proliferation of K2 and problems related to it show, the unregulated market in recreational drugs presents hazards. Virginia -- indeed, the entire U.S. -- needs to find a rational solution that permits public agencies to protect public health and discourage drug use, without turning people into felons for the kind of youthful experimentation admitted to by, among others, President Obama. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D