Pubdate: Thu, 17 May 2001
Source: Staten Island Advance (NY)
Copyright: 2001 Advance Publication Inc.
Contact:  http://www.silive.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/646

SORRY, SICK FRIENDS -- POT IS A NO-NO

The Supremes have nixed medical grass. That'll wipe the smiles off those 
hippies in the oncology ward -- no more high-fives after an ominous biopsy 
now. Why, today you can go to any schoolyard and see a dozen patients in 
hospital gowns, still attached to their morphine drips, selling hits for a 
five-spot; you just know that legal prescription grass would end up in 
kids' hands, too. Sure, a cancer patient might insist that medical 
marijuana actually helps. But what does he know that the Supreme Court doesn't?

At the risk of offending those who've had their sarcasm detectors 
surgically removed -- and got stoned that night because it made the 
stitches itch less -- the preceeding paragraphs were opposed to the 
abolition of medical marijuana. There are instances where it probably does 
a great deal of good, and it ought to be allowed in carefully controlled 
circumstances. Just because marijuana's side-effect is agreeable 
stupification doesn't mean it should be withdrawn from the physician's quiver.

That does not mean, however, that anyone ought to be able to claim to have 
a medical condition that marijuana can solve. There are too many quack docs 
out there who'd cheerfully examine someone, diagnose "Blocked Whimsy Ducts" 
and write a script for a pound of goofy-tinder. And what's wrong with that, 
exactly?

Well, it's the start of the slippery slope. If you can join a club that 
gives marijuana to people who are clinically depressed, then why not give 
it to those who are merely sad for reasons that have nothing to do with 
errant brain chemistry? Once we let anyone pass out grass for big reasons, 
it gets passed out for small reasons, and it ends up legal. That wouldn't 
mean the end of Western Civilization. It is, however hard to argue that 
what America needs is MORE drug usage.

Of course, legalization might reduce the corruption, the hypocrisy, the 
crushing burden on the courts, and -- best of all -- the annoying public 
service spots. But legalizing pot is one step to legalizing everything, 
because one man's toke is another man's snort. Total legalization will give 
us two choices.

Option 1: Private enterprise sells the dope. Right now, the state and the 
trial lawyers are scarfing down billions from lawsuits against Big Tobacco. 
What company wants to set itself up as Big Crack? Big Smack? Even if a 
company was stupid enough to try, imagine the perils of marketing Tweaker's 
Choice Menthol Meth.

The government will require labels: Warning! the Surgeon General has 
determined that hordes of imaginary horseflies may consume your flesh, but 
don't harsh our buzz with your bad trip, dude; take it outside. Or, for 
grass: The Surgeon General has determined that neither you nor your 
roommate can remember whether you ordered pizza, or who's supposed to pay 
for it this time.

As we've seen with cigarettes, a warning doesn't let a drug maker off the hook.

That leads us to Option 2: The government sells it. Yes, Uncle Sam opens a 
crack store in the ghetto. You liked it as a conspiracy theory; you'll love 
it as public policy.

You'd still have a prison population full of drug users, except they'd be 
locked up for thievery instead of possession. How else do you support a 
habit? Do we expect heroin addicts to get second jobs? Ah, but we'd educate 
them so they wouldn't have habits. We'd teach them to use crack 
responsibly. See, all those zombies staggering around the 'hood stealing 
from everyone to get another vial -- that wasn't educational enough. You 
have to back it up with a slide-show and some puppet skits.

Here are your drugs, kids; they're completely legal. Now for God's sake 
don't even think of doing them -- but if you do, here's how to make sure 
you tie off your arm without bruising a vein.

What does this have to do with medical marijuana? Nothing, at first. Just 
to suggest that total legalization swaps one set of problems for another. 
Eventually we'll have drugs that will do what medical marijuana supposedly 
does, and does it for everyone. Until then, however, maybe it's not the 
wrong thing to let some people use it under medical supervision. Maybe 
there are some people in pain who might actually find it a blessing.

Disagree? Then complete the sentence. "No! They should suffer, because 
___." Bonus points if you can figure out a way to use the word "compassionate."
- ---
MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens