Pubdate: Tue, 27 Dec 2011 Source: Virginian-Pilot (Norfolk, VA) Copyright: 2011 The Virginian-Pilot Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/zJNzcThR Website: http://hamptonroads.com/pilotonline Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/483 TIME TO CHANGE DRUG STRATEGY Federal authorities' efforts in recent months to crack down on state-regulated marijuana dispensaries in California have increased tensions over which level of government should take the lead in defining the legal boundaries for drug use and possession. Marijuana, under the federal Controlled Substances Act, is classified as a Schedule I drug, the same as LSD and ecstasy. The designation means none is recognized as having any medicinal value. But that view runs counter to the positions of numerous doctors and scientists who've found the plant does, indeed, offer some medicinal benefits to individuals dealing with certain health conditions. More than a dozen states, and the District of Columbia, have been convinced and approved their own laws that either decriminalize marijuana or allow for its medicinal use. Such moves are based as much on science as the reality that this nation's war on drug use has failed. An Associated Press report last year found the federal government had poured $1 trillion into boosting drug-control efforts since 1970. The result: The number of drug users in the U.S. has nearly doubled, the number of drug overdoses has climbed steadily, millions of nonviolent drug offenders have been imprisoned, and countless lives have been ruined. President Barack Obama signaled previously that his administration wasn't interested in dismantling the state-regulated networks of legitimate marijuana dispensaries in states that have loosened their own drug laws. But his administration's actions have been demonstrably different, given authorities' recent efforts to enforce the supremacy of federal drug laws. A proposal sponsored by Rep. Ron Paul, a Texan seeking the Republican presidential nomination, and Rep. Barney Frank, a Democrat from Massachusetts, would roll back some of the federal restrictions that have propelled the recent crack-down in California. It would, in other words, leave states to decide whether to recognize the medicinal value of marijuana and exchange the strategy of criminalization for one of treatment and education. The bill has been stuck for the past four months in a subcommittee, where it's been all but ignored. Perhaps it shouldn't pass in its current form. Perhaps some changes are needed. But given the results of the current strategy - and the fact that more Americans than ever (50 percent, according to a recent Gallup poll) actually favor legalization of marijuana - the bill deserves discussion. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom