Pubdate: Sun, 12 Jan 2014
Source: Atlanta Journal-Constitution (GA)
Copyright: 2014 The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Contact:  http://www.ajc.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/28
Author: Jim Galloway

MEDICAL MARIJUANA GETS TAKEN SERIOUSLY

Surely you've noticed that the meaning of conservatism has undergone 
a not-so-gradual makeover in the last few years.

The most obvious marker has been gay marriage. Ten years ago, more 
than three-fourths of 3.2 million Georgia voters approved a 
constitutional ban on such unions.

Perhaps a majority in this state would still endorse that sentiment. 
But polls clearly indicate an age-oriented shift, even among 
Republicans. By the time my generation cleans out its desk and exits 
the building, same-sex matrimony will be an accepted social fact, 
even in the South.

Another counterculture taboo has just begun to wobble. Two states - 
Colorado and Washington - now allow recreational use of marijuana. 
More importantly, Gov. Andrew Cuomo last week took a first step 
toward making New York the 21st state to legalize the use of pot for 
medicinal purposes.

Even in Georgia, we are experiencing the first stirrings of official 
curiosity. Josh McKoon, R-Columbus, one of the younger members of the 
state Senate, has proposed a bit of fact-finding on medicinal uses 
for marijuana. And whether Georgia's limited 1980s-era law, allowing 
the use of pot for the treatment of glaucoma and cancer, ought to be expanded.

"There's not a piece of legislation. What I'm interested in doing is 
having a hearing so we can bring some medical experts forward to tell 
us, one way or the other," McKoon said.

One potential witness: Dr. Sanjay Gupta, the Emory University 
neurosurgeon/journalist whose CNN documentary, "Weed," aired a few 
months ago. The 45-minute report is a kind of antidote to "Reefer 
Madness," the 1930s cult classic that helped put marijuana on the 
federal list of banned substances.

Gupta showed how pot - or its refined ingredients - could help 
control some seizures in children. He now argues that researchers 
have overemphasized marijuana's dangers, and ignored its potential benefits.

The CNN piece sparked McKoon's interest. "I see [Gupta] as a 
sober-minded person. That got my attention," the state lawmaker said.

"I've had constituents who have children with seizure disorder. I've 
had constituents who are undergoing chemotherapy treatments who say 
it would be helpful for pain," McKoon said. "I just want to separate 
the facts from fiction. You could have a handful of these anecdotal 
stories without really knowing for sure."

For the moment, leaders in the state Capitol appear willing to let 
McKoon proceed with the hearings, which the senator hopes to hold 
during the 40-day legislative session that begins Monday.

"I want to look at the science. I want to look at the medicine," 
House Speaker David Ralston said last week. Senate President pro tem 
David Shafer, R-Duluth, likewise appears amenable.

"I have never been an advocate for liberalizing marijuana laws, but I 
am open to our studying potential medical applications," Shafer said 
in an emailed statement. "It is unfortunate that some states have 
clouded the issue by using a medical justification to effectively 
legalize recreational use."

Among the Capitol's authority figures, Gov. Nathan Deal was the most 
wary. "I think it's a subject that needs very detailed discussion. 
I've heard mixed reports," the governor said Friday. "If we amend the 
law, I don't want to create a significant problem that expands 
marijuana use in the state. I don't think a majority of voters want that."

McKoon said he can't see himself ever voting to legalize marijuana 
for recreational use. But he agrees that, as with gay marriage, it is 
the increasing influence of libertarian conservatives within the GOP 
that makes a reassessment of marijuana use possible.

"If I had four town hall meetings in my district, maybe at one of 
those town hall meetings someone would stand up and ask about 
legalized marijuana," he said. "And I think that those folks would 
self-identify as liberty-movement Republicans."

But as political issues go, McKoon argues that there's an important 
distinction between gay marriage and marijuana. Gay marriage, he 
contends, has been pushed along primarily through court action.

"With the marijuana issue, you've seen legislatures across the 
country deal with it in different ways," McKoon said. "And frankly, 
that's one of the things I'd want the study committee to do. Now that 
we've got so many states that have done something, let's see what 
their experience has done."

It's the more "organic" way to proceed, McKoon said. And the pun was 
absolutely unintended.
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom