Pubdate: Fri, 26 Mar 1999 Source: Arkansas Times (AR) Copyright: 1999 Arkansas Times Limited Partnership Contact: (501) 375-3623 Mail: Post Office Box 34010, Little Rock, AR 72203 Website: http://www.arktimes.com/ Author: Mara Leveritt - Opinion Columnist 'CHEECH AND CHONG MEDICINE' Barry R. McCaffrey, director of the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy, barely missed a beat. The new report on marijuana overturned almost everything that McCaffrey, the White House, and the Washington establishment have been saying about marijuana. But the nation's drug czar didn't let a little thing like being debunked prompt him to re-examine his position. He is the spokesman for the drug war, and to him, marijuana is the enemy and legalization is defeat. His job is to make sure the enemy is seen as dangerous. Thus, for the past three years, McCaffrey has derided the increasingly popular belief that marijuana might be medically useful. He has dismissed the idea as "hooey" and called the notion of medical marijuana "a sham." While voters in a half dozen states have voted to legalize medical marijuana, McCaffrey has mocked the initiatives as "Cheech and Chong medicine." President Clinton has stood behind McCaffrey, suggesting that the voters in Alaska, Arizona, California, Nevada, Oregon, and Washington, where medical marijuana initiatives were approved, must have been confused. Despite the new state laws, the federal government still insists on keeping all forms of marijuana illegal. McCaffrey's problem is that Washington's credibility on the subject is nil. Americans simply do not believe the official line anymore. And increasing numbers of them do believe that marijuana may offer some significant medical relief. Now their common sense has found support in a report that, ironically, was requested and paid for by McCaffrey's own office. Last week, the Institute of Medicine, an affiliate of the National Academy of Sciences, concluded in its report that some patients -- particularly those suffering from cancer and AIDS -- could be helped by marijuana. The Institute's analysis follows a 1997 report in which experts brought together by the National Institutes of Health reached essentially the same conclusion. Even though word of a very inexpensive yet highly effective medicine might seem like good news, it's bad news for McCaffrey's White House Office of National Drug Control Policy. The drug czar did not hail the latest report's findings that marijuana's active ingredients can ease pain, nausea and vomiting. And there was certainly no audible sigh of relief over the report's equally important conclusion that there is no scientific basis for the oft-repeated claims that marijuana acts as a "gateway" to harder drugs; that marijuana is addictive, or that use of marijuana as a medicine would encourage its abuse either among patients or the general public. But surely, McCaffrey is not surprised. Scientists have been issuing similar reports for years. As far back as 1972, the Shafer Commission, appointed by President Nixon, recommended that marijuana be decriminalized -- and not just for medical use. Nixon ignored the advice. Demagoguery has always beat out science in the marijuana debate. And look at the results: o The crackdown that began with marijuana escalated to a war on drugs. o Judges had their hands tied with mandatory sentences. o Police forces burgeoned. o Families and communities were decimated by incarcerations due to drugs. o Prisons exploded into a blue-chip industry. o Thousands of patients whose suffering might have been relieved endured needless misery. Now that yet another group of scientists has pointed out how marijuana's benefits appear to outweigh its relatively minor liabilities, we might dare hope that Washington would listen. We might dream that our leaders would throw in the towel and be grateful to learn that they can stop trying to fight this ancient non-enemy. But, I'm afraid we will hope and dream in vain. At the same time that support for medical marijuana has swelled, marijuana arrests have been proceeding at a record pace. There were three-quarters of a million of them in 1997, and 90 percent of those were for simple possession. Some of those arrested argued that they used marijuana for pain. But that's a claim that political leaders continue to reject -- science notwithstanding. They say they're protecting us, but the real reason, I submit, is money. Too many people have gotten rich on illegal marijuana to want it legalized, and so far, they have prevailed. But now that the tide is turning and the move to legalize medical marijuana appears unstoppable, the drive will be to keep the drug profitable in a different way -- by routing it through the pharmaceutical industry. McCaffrey has already pointed the new direction. After the report's release, he explained that, "the future of marijuana as medicine lies in things like inhalers" and in drugs extracted from the plant -- certainly not in the raw vegetation. Development will take years. It has never mattered in the past how many people's lives, how many civil liberties, or how much of the nation's wealth had to be sacrificed to keep marijuana illegal. Nothing appears likely to change that -- neither science, nor sense, nor mercy. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake