Pubdate: Thu, 21 Dec 2000
Source: Times-Standard (CA)
Copyright: 2000 The Times-Standard
Contact:  930 Sixth St. Eureka, CA 95501
Fax: 707-441-0501
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Website: http://www.times-standard.com/
Pubdate: Thu, 21 Dec 2000

MEDICAL MARIJUANA MEASURE MASKS LARGER FAILURE OF VISION

County supervisors made a cautious move this week that should provide some 
help to medical marijuana users without taking the county onto shaky legal 
ground. The U.S. Supreme Court eventually will rule on California's 
Proposition 215, and it makes no sense for the county to anticipate their 
decision.

The Public Health Department will issue identification cards to medical 
marijuana users who can produce a legitimate recommendation from a licensed 
physician -- doctors can't actually "prescribe" marijuana, because it's a 
herbal remedy, not part of the recognized pharmacopoeia. The county policy 
includes restrictions to reduce (it cannot eliminate) the likelihood that 
the cards will be abused.

What the county did not do is resolve the greatest source of present 
controversy, by specifying how much marijuana a patient may legally 
possess, or a "provider" may grow. This will continue to be left to the 
judgment of individual police officers, following a departmental 
rule-of-thumb. Most are not likely to err on the side of generosity.

That means we will continue to hear angry complaints -- some of them 
perhaps legitimate -- about confiscated pot. A few of these have involved 
growers who seem to be genuinely trying to comply with the law, and who 
feel they were punished for their honesty.

The medical marijuana initiative, unfortunately, opened the door to massive 
abuse. Suddenly California was full of invalids who could only find relief 
in a reefer, and of growers who were selflessly willing to supply scores of 
such unfortunates with "medicine." Few of them had much difficulty finding 
a healer of some description who would attest to their medical need.

There are, in fact, rather few physical conditions for which marijuana is 
the remedy of choice. It is not a cure, but primarily a pain reliever. Some 
sufferers say they experience fewer harsh side effects from it than from 
other pain-killing drugs.

Now marijuana is not a particularly dangerous drug (certainly less so than 
alcohol and nicotine) and there is no reason why those few cancer, glaucoma 
and AIDS patients who really would benefit from it should not have it. 
California voters recognized this when they passed Prop 215 in 1996, and 
county officials are moving cautiously but, we believe, sincerely to make 
it possible.

We do not for a moment, however, believe that all or even most of the 
advocates of medical marijuana are sufferers who cannot obtain relief by 
any other means. Some are people who enjoy smoking pot, or who wish to 
profit from growing and selling the plant, who have seized on this means to 
obtain its partial legalization.

While there are valid arguments against legalizing marijuana, it might make 
more sense to regulate, control and tax it like tobacco and alcohol than to 
condone hypocrisy of this sort. We have been trying to suppress marijuana 
for almost a century, with no result but a great expenditure of public 
funds that might have been put to better use. The experience with alcohol 
prohibition in the 1920s should have been a sufficient lesson in futility.

The certainty of political retaliation almost precludes any public official 
from admitting the failure of present policies or openly discussing more 
workable alternatives. We are apparently fated to remain locked into our 
present state of mutually agreed denial.

And government officials, doctors, lawyers, police and pot growers will all 
continue their solemn ceremonial dance around a sad handful of seriously 
ill people.
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