Pubdate: Sun, 03 Dec 2000
Source: Daily News of Los Angeles (CA)
Copyright: 2000 Daily News of Los Angeles
Address: P.O. Box 4200, Woodland Hills, CA 91365
Fax: (818)713-3723
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Website: http://www.DailyNews.com/
Author: Chris Weikopf, Daily News staff writer

COURT, BUSH BEST HOPES FOR MEDICAL POT

With some notable exceptions, the drug-legalization crowd tends to be 
dominated by those for whom easy access to narcotics is less a 
philosophical imperative than a personal preference. They want to end the 
war on drugs only because they'd rather smoke the peace pipe.

And yet, when it comes to the issue of medical marijuana, it's the 
anti-drug absolutists who sound like they've just said yes. How else to 
explain the Clinton-Gore administration's adamant refusal to allow AIDS 
patients, cancer victims and other sufferers to alleviate their illness 
with doctor-recommended medicinal marijuana?

As Al Gore's campaign rushes to the courts, purportedly in the name of 
democracy and states' rights, the Clinton-Gore administration also rushes 
to the courts -- seeking to thwart democracy and quash states' rights. It's 
pushing to kill Proposition 215, the California initiative legalizing 
medical marijuana that 65 percent of the state's voters backed in 1996.

Gore might like to wax on about how "a vote is not just a piece of paper, a 
vote is a human voice," but ever since Proposition 215 made the ballot, the 
administration has done all it can to silence the clear voice of California 
voters. It has sought to shut down various cannabis clubs throughout the 
state, and its struggle against one in Oakland has taken the issue through 
the federal courts.

Last Monday, the U.S. Supreme Court agreed to hear the case some time next 
year -- presumably after it's resolved the presidential election.

The administration contends that Proposition 215 interferes with its 
ability to enforce federal drug laws that prohibit virtually all marijuana 
use, with the exception of a few narrowly constrained medical experiments. 
The question before the Supreme Court is whether, like such experiments, 
the "medical necessity" that California cites in defense of Proposition 215 
warrants an exemption from the stringent application of federal law.

The U.S. Department of Justice rejects the "medical necessity" claim, 
arguing that marijuana has "no currently accepted medical use." But that 
position seems to stem from an ideological commitment to a total war on 
drugs, not medical reality.

The federal government is dazed by the prospect that acknowledging some 
limited good use for otherwise bad drugs might undermine its overall case 
for prohibition. Rather than risk this appearance of inconsistency, 
politicians from both parties seem content to let those who could use 
marijuana to alleviate their pain keep on suffering.

Although there's a limited number of studies on the subject, there's no 
shortage of anecdotal evidence and doctors' testimony that, when used 
appropriately, marijuana can settle patients' stomachs, build up their 
weight, control pain, steady spastic muscles, even relieve glaucoma. It's 
been remarkably effective at helping some cancer patients stave off nausea 
and restore their appetites after chemotherapy treatments.

Even a recent federal study lends some credibility to marijuana's medical 
value. In 1997, Drug Czar Barry McCaffrey -- who has consistently opposed 
Proposition 215 -- asked the federal Institute of Medicine to investigate 
the drug's medicinal qualities. The IOM concluded: "The accumulated data 
indicate a potential therapeutic value for cannabinoid drugs, particularly 
for symptoms such as pain relief, control of nausea and vomiting, and 
appetite stimulation."

Nonetheless, Washington clings to its hazy concern that making a legal 
distinction between criminals and cancer victims will open the floodgates 
to rampant drug use and, eventually, legalization. Rather than combat abuse 
as it happens, it insists upon treating recreational and therapeutic 
marijuana use in exactly the same way.

It's a case of zero tolerance begetting zero sense, culminating in a 
30-year-old federal policy that has produced the cruelest of absurdities: 
denying, in the name of ideological purity, treatment to those who suffer.

Proposition 215 -- like the eight other state medical-marijuana laws it has 
inspired across the country -- was an effort to restore some semblance of 
sobriety to American drug policy. Despite the administration's dogged 
resistance, there's a chance that it might just succeed -- if the Supreme 
Court places a greater value on states' rights, popular elections and 
compassion than does the Clinton-Gore administration.

There's also the hope that a George W. Bush administration, should it ever 
come to pass, would show more deference to California law. Even though 
Republicans are, for the most part, every bit as inflexible and dogmatic 
about the war on drugs as Democrats, Bush has said that the question of 
medical marijuana rightfully belongs to the states.

For a "compassionate conservative" and a champion of limited government, 
that's a reasonable position to take. Of course, it would also be a 
reasonable position for Gore, who, when denouncing HMOs during the 
campaign, repeatedly called to "give the decisions back to the doctors."

Doctors know their patients' needs better than the federal government -- 
especially a federal government trapped in a decades-old addiction to 
excessive, failed policies.
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