Source: Scotland On Sunday Contact: Pubdate: 11 Jan 1998 STRAW'S BELIEF IN CANNABIS 'DANGER' IGNORES DRUG'S PROVEN MEDICAL USES With reference to your article 'Straw bows to cannabis call' (News, January 4), I doubt that Jack Straw will bow very far. He is an experienced and skilled practitioner of the art of politics. He contrives to give the impression that he is yielding while holding fast to his ideological position. This becomes clear if one pauses a moment to consider the devious use of language in his closing statements: "If drug companies and pressure groups can come forward and say, first, that it [marijuana] has medical therapeutic uses, let them do so. If they can prove that this drug is not [narcotic and dangerous], of course we will have to think about it again." The trick here, of course, is to get the opposition to prove a negative. Why, one might well ask, would any drug company want to do that? Why would they want to lay out huge sums of money to prove that a herb that grows wild has "medical therapeutic uses" when so doing would mean that they would lose most of the customers for the expensive synthetic substitutes that they have already put on the market? As for proving that it is not "narcotic and dangerous", the British government assembled a team of medical and other experts to study the use and abuse of marijuana in India in 1894. The report published by this committee after a 12- month investigation found exactly that, and one should note in passing, that marijuana has been used by the majority of the working population for hundreds of years in various parts of India to ward of the effects of fatigue. (I can vouch for that from personal experience: I spent three years there from 1942-45.) There have been many similar reports published since, seven of which were summed up, on November 13, 1997, by Judge John McCart. He said he had been persuaded by the evidence laid before him that marijuana was "comparatively harmless" next to the so-called hard drugs including nicotine and alcohol; that it was not addicitve or demotivational and should not be considered as a 'gateway' drug. Let Jack Straw continue his posturing. Your readers, I'm sure, will make the right connection. Verily, there are none so blind... Pat Dolan, Vancouver