Pubdate: Sun, 06 Nov 2011 Source: San Diego Union Tribune (CA) Copyright: 2011 Union-Tribune Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.signonsandiego.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/386 Note: Seldom prints LTEs from outside it's circulation area. THE CONTRADICTIONS OF REEFER MADNESS America's love affair with, and warfare against, the psychoactive drug marijuana both continue in mind-blowing intensity. Marijuana is, according to one of the commentaries on the preceding Dialog page, the country's largest cash crop, indicating a whole lot of people are involved in growing, selling and smoking it. And yet, combating those growers, sellers and users is a major component of the federal government's 40-year-old war on drugs. The result of this contradiction is more contradiction. Marijuana remains a Schedule 1 drug defined as having the greatest potential for abuse and no accepted medical use and is against federal law for all purposes. But numerous states, including California, recognize a medical use for marijuana and make repeated efforts to lessen penalties or legalize it. On the statewide ballot last November, a proposition to legalize, regulate and tax marijuana drew a 46.5 percent "yes" vote 47.1 percent "yes" in San Diego County. And a new proposition is in circulation for another possible vote next November. Still more contradiction: In San Diego County, neighborhood and law enforcement concerns about medical marijuana dispensaries prompted the county government and several cities, including San Diego, to enact dispensary bans or strict controls on their location. But medical marijuana advocates quickly gathered enough signatures on referendum petitions to force San Diego to rescind its controls. That was followed by a crackdown on dispensaries by the City Attorney's Office. And all four U.S. attorneys in California also launched a federal campaign to shutter dispensaries statewide. What does it all mean? To this editorial board, it means several things. It means we agree with the California Medical Association that scientific data on the efficacy and risks of marijuana as medicine are unclear, but that we disagree with the CMA's illogical leap that it should be legalized for medical and recreational use. It means we agree with the concerns of law enforcement and community leaders about the impact of dispensaries on neighborhoods and that San Diego must find a way to re-enact controls. It means that, lacking those controls, we support City Attorney Jan Goldsmith, local U.S. Attorney Laura Duffy and her colleagues elsewhere in the state in their crackdown on dispensaries, all of which are illegal under federal law and all of which in San Diego violate zoning restrictions, and virtually all of which everywhere have become vehicles for recreational drug users to skirt the laws. It means that the 1996 California medical marijuana law, written by marijuana advocates, must somehow be rewritten so that marijuana can be available to real patients with real diseases for which marijuana is believed to be a better treatment than conventional medications, but not to anyone with a headache. And it means that at some point, the federal government and states like California must somehow reconcile all the absurd contradictions. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom