Pubdate: Thu, 25 Oct 2012 Source: Boston Herald (MA) Copyright: 2012 The Boston Herald, Inc Contact: http://news.bostonherald.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/53 Note: Prints only very short LTEs. Author: Margery Eagan TIME IS RIGHT FOR MEDICAL MARIJUANA Right before Massachusetts voted in a landslide to decriminalize marijuana possession, prosecutors crusading against the evil weed confessed they'd smoked it. District Attorneys Dan Conley of Suffolk, Gerry Leone of Middlesex and Michael O'Keefe of the Cape all admitted to silly, youthful inhales. Yesterday, Worcester County DA Joseph Early hesitated when asked about young and irresponsible pot use. "I went to UMass," he said. "In the '70's." To which I replied, "Nuff said." Which helps make my point. The reefer-madness, sky-is-falling rhetoric used every time marijuana laws get challenged around here doesn't cut it anymore. Almost everybody knows former potheads who grew up to be upstanding citizens - even prosecutors. Simply put, ballot Question 3 legalizing medical marijuana should pass because almost everybody today also knows someone whose suffering might have been alleviated. But they never got their weed because our state government, incredibly, has the gall to tell dying patients, "Sorry, against the rules." Talk about madness. On Monday some young, recovering drug addicts were at the State House opposing Question 3. With all due respect, there's no more relationship between recreational marijuana use and drug addiction than there is between social drinking and alcoholism. Plus, these young people "didn't get (their marijuana) from a physician," said state Rep. Frank Smizik, a Brookline Democrat who favors Question 3. They likely got it where lots of teens do: from another kid at school. This brings me to the old bugaboo, "What about the children?" Question 3 opponents predict teens will sneak off to unscrupulous doctors to get bogus prescriptions which they will then take to slippery marijuana stores. That's a lot of hassle for a 16-year-old who can make an easy buy two minutes after school lets out. What you notice about this particular weed war is that many proponents have seen firsthand the suffering marijuana might help. Smizik's daughter's dying father-in-law traveled here for her wedding to his son only after getting a prescription in California. Dr. Karen Munkacy, a Newton breast cancer survivor, wanted the drug but couldn't get it. Even DA Early, who opposes the ballot question's wording, does not oppose medical marijuana itself. He watched a close friend endure pancreatic cancer. "And he couldn't keep food down," he said. The only solution is to pass Question 3. If it's as poorly crafted as opponents claim, let lawmakers fix it. The sick and dying shouldn't have to wait one more day. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom