Pubdate: Wed, 27 Oct 2010 Source: Volante, The (U of SD, Edu SD) Copyright: 2010 The Volante Contact: http://www.mapinc.org/media/5211 Website: http://www.volanteonline.com/ Pubdate: 27 Oct 2010 Author: Thomas Emanuel Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topic/Measure+13 PRO: VOTE YES, STOP REEFER MADNESS As I write this, I am listening to Pink Floyd's "Dark Side of the Moon" - namely the song "Time." This is no coincidence. I figured if I'm going to write about pot, I should put myself in the proper frame of mind. Word choice is important here: "frame," not "state." I am not, in fact, high right now. Now that we have established that, South Dakota voters should vote yes on Measure 13 to legalize medicinal marijuana. Marijuana has been found to be an effective remedy for a number of medical conditions. It can be used as a painkiller, a relaxant and an appetite stimulant in conjunction with everything from Alzheimer's disease to breast cancer. Doctors' objections to medical cannabis have been directed, not at the drug itself, but at the method of consumption. They point out smoking pot - smoking anything - is still harmful, and other, less carcinogenic remedies are preferable. They are absolutely right, of course. However, one can use marijuana without smoking it. For instance, patients could use a vaporizer. Vaporizers heat the THC in marijuana until it becomes a gas and then cools it to temperatures suitable for inhalation, allowing a patient to receive the high without the carcinogens. Some will argue allowing patients to use cannabis will make them addicted. Sure, you can become addicted to marijuana. You can become addicted to alcohol, too. Many people are, in fact. Yet it is completely legal to get a drink after a long day at work. Why should it be illegal to get high after a long day of battling chronic pain? The key is moderation, not teetotalism. Either we go should go back to Prohibition - a terrible, terrible idea - or legalize both, for consistency's sake. That leaves the tried-and-true "gateway drug" argument. My high school English teacher taught me about that one. She called it the "slippery slope" fallacy and told us to avoid it in our writing, because it was bad logic. Quite apart from evidence, I have very personal reasons for supporting the decriminalization of medicinal marijuana. When I was three years old, my father had to be treated for scarlet fever. The doctors accidentally used a contaminated blood sample for one of his transfusions, and he contracted hepatitis C. Starting when I was 14, he had to undergo intensive chemotherapy in order to keep a doctor's mistake from killing him. So as an adolescent, I got to watch my father suffer through the three worst years of his life, hoping the drugs would destroy disease faster than they destroyed him. Now, at 60, my father is doing much better. It was hard, though, to watch him in that kind of pain on a prolonged, day-to-day basis. Although it did not occur to me at the time, medicinal marijuana would probably have made my dad's life easier. He never used it, of course. Had he done so, he would have risked up to a $1,000 fine or a year in jail. Furthermore, he would have been branded with a criminal record that would have endangered his job with the federal government and, thus, threatened the welfare of his children. This insane policy goes back to the Depression. During the 1930s, some people were afraid that "the blacks" and "the Mexicans" were using "reefer" to ensnare America's youth and turn them into indolent hooligans. According to a 1930's newspaper, "Marihuana (sic) influences Negroes to look at white people in the eye, step on white men's shadows and look at a white woman twice." This is preposterous, of course, but it caught the imagination of a latently racist American public, leading them to ban cannabis. Now, people like my father have been denied the opportunity to alleviate their suffering, all because some Depression-era legislators were scared of black people. The only crime I see here is that current cannabis laws are allowed to continue. South Dakota should vote yes on Measure 13 Nov. 2 as the first step toward ending an obsolete and counterproductive drug policy. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D