Pubdate: Mon, 09 Nov 1998 Source: Times Union (NY) Copyright: 1998, Capital Newspapers Division of The Hearst Corporation Contact: 518-454-5628 Website: http://www.timesunion.com/ POT POLITICS As More States Approve The Use Of Marijuana For Medical Purposes, The White House Should Pay Heed Politicians reluctant to follow their better instincts and support the medicinal use of marijuana have reason to be more confident of their views as a result of elections last week. In Alaska, Arizona, Nevada, Oregon and Washington state -- not all exactly strongholds of liberalism -- voters have expressed their support for the legal use of pot under such circumstances. The Clinton administration in particular should reconsider its opposition. The approval of referendums on Tuesday follows similar election results in California and Arizona in 1996. Arizona lawmakers later rescinded that vote. Support is gaining for using marijuana to treat patients suffering from cancer, glaucoma, and multiple sclerosis. The leader of the medical marijuana movement in Arizona says the acceptance of a constructive use for marijuana is an example of the rejection of what had been the political status quo. In California, UCLA professor Mark Kleinman offers this interpretation: "It's no longer possible to buffalo the American people by screaming drugs and having them run away.'' Scientific evidence is on the popular side. Cancer patients find that marijuana helps ward off the nausea associated with chemotherapy, while glaucoma patients use it to relieve pressure within the eye. AIDS patients regain their appetites after smoking it. The problem is that the White House is preoccupied with the politics of even the limited legal use of pot, to the point where it hardly addresses the health issue at all. The sentiment of voters is met with an official reiteration of its position that liberalized state laws won't alter federal policy. Dr. Barry McCaffrey, the Clinton administration's drug czar, points to the money the advocates for medicinal marijuana have amassed. It's true that such forces have benefited from a $5 million ad campaign financed by billionaire George Soros. But what moderately successful political movement doesn't have at least some money behind it? Worse, there's no basis for the White House contention that the push for the use of marijuana for medicinal purposes is really a front for a movement to legalize other drugs. That's an unfair attack on what are efforts to ease suffering, and nothing more. It's unsettlingly reminiscent of its contention that free needle distribution encourages intravenous drug use. There's nothing inconsistent about being troubled by the reckless use of marijuana and accepting the benefits of its use under closely monitored medical conditions. This page has long advocated such a humane approach in New York state. Now voters have sent a sober message to politicians in Washington and in state capitals that shouldn't be automatically rejected. - --- Checked-by: Patrick Henry