Pubdate: Sun, 16 Oct 2011
Source: Sacramento Bee (CA)
Copyright: 2011 The Sacramento Bee
Contact: http://mapinc.org/url/0n4cG7L1
Website: http://www.sacbee.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/376
Author: Marcos Breton

CALIFORNIA'S MADE A SORRY MESS OF MEDICAL MARIJUANA LAWS

Chaos can flourish in the space between ambivalence and intransigence.

Such is life in California, where muddled medical marijuana laws and 
rigid federal laws outlawing all marijuana use have created an 
atmosphere stranger than fiction.

When a U.S. attorney in California says she is going to go after 
advertisers who carry medical marijuana ads  as my own newspaper does 
you know you've gone down the rabbit hole.

Laura E. Duffy, the federal prosecutor whose district includes 
Imperial and San Diego counties, said in an interview last week with 
California Watch and KQED: "I'm actually hearing radio and seeing TV 
advertising (of medical marijuana). It's gone mainstream. Not only is 
it inappropriate  one has to wonder what kind of message we're 
sending to our children  it's against the law."

A U.S. attorney this surprised by the obvious is worthy of satire. 
But somebody had to step in and it might as well have been the feds. 
Medical marijuana long ago became a charade thanks in large part to a 
state Legislature incapable of providing direction.

But we can't lay it all on the Legislature. A lot of us are 
ambivalent about marijuana, aren't we? We've tried it. Maybe we 
sometimes still sneak a little hit or fall all over ourselves making 
excuses why our kids use it so much.

Who cares if able-bodied people are walking into dispensaries 
feigning sickness as a ruse to get high? Who cares if places peddling 
marijuana as "medicine" boast pictures of babes with bongs, big 
breasts and skin-tight bikinis? The feds look around this ridiculous 
landscape and see scofflaws they accuse of shipping pot across state 
lines for huge profits.

Medical marijuana providers weren't supposed to be pot versions of 
Scarface. This was supposed to be medicine.

When I voted to support the Compassionate Use Act of 1996, I 
envisioned medical pot helping AIDS patients or glaucoma sufferers or 
people with all forms of cancer, chronic pain and neurological disorders.

But right down the street from where I work, and all over California, 
anybody can get it.

Yet even the feds seem conflicted.

Last week, Ben Wagner, the U.S. attorney based in Sacramento, went on 
Capital Public Radio and said: "We are not about (taking people's) 
medicine. We're not pursuing sick people."

OK, but according to federal law, marijuana is classified as a 
Schedule I drug, among the most harmful and devoid of any medicinal value.

So what medicine is Mr. Wagner talking about? If you're enforcing the 
letter of federal law, you go after all dispensaries, right? Wagner 
said his officers are not going to be going after "people who are 
genuinely sick and using medical marijuana for their own care."

If that's the case, shouldn't the feds be removing marijuana from its 
most restrictive category? Shouldn't the Food and Drug Administration 
move forward with scientific studies to determine if marijuana should 
be legally used as medicine? In 2009, the American Medical 
Association called for this.

So has the American Society of Addiction Medicine, a professional 
society of doctors promoting improved quality of addiction medicine.

In a white paper, ASAM wrote: "This (FDA) process provides important 
protections for patients, making products available only when they 1) 
are standardized by identity, purity, potency and quality, 2) are 
accompanied by adequate directions for use in the approved medical 
indication, and 3) have risk/benefit profiles that have been defined 
in well-controlled clinical trials."

This would be a legitimate process that could truly be regulated and 
taxed like any other drug. It would be a far cry from the current 
sham where anyone can go to a quack doctor to get a recommendation to 
get high  and where drug traffickers pose as sellers of "medicine."

Would the FDA fully sanction marijuana as a drug with medicinal value 
in our lifetimes? If it ever did, my bet is that only a minority of 
people who use marijuana as medicine would be happy. Every pothead 
faker would despair at a legitimate system that would likely reduce 
the potency of doses or remove the sensation of getting high to focus 
only on pain relief.

What fun would that be?

Under President Barack Obama, the feds seem to be targeting only the 
worst actors in California's medical marijuana trade. Well, except 
for the San Diego U.S. attorney who is shocked  shocked!  at 
medicinal pot advertising and is potentially targeting newspapers and 
TV stations.

Maybe California wouldn't have such problems if it controlled medical 
marijuana more strictly, as Colorado does, but there are no 
guarantees as long as pot remains illegal federally.

What if Mitt Romney becomes president a little more than a year from 
now? What if it becomes open season on this blue state obsessed with 
weed? That could be reefer madness.
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom