Pubdate: Thu, 8 Nov 2007 Source: Commonwealth Times,The (Virginia Commonwealth U, VA Edu) Copyright: 2007 The Commonwealth Times Contact: http://www.commonwealthtimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4611 Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v07/n1281/a01.html Author: Clifford A. Schaffer Note: Title by Newshawk LEGALIZATION POINTS MISSED I suggest a simpler law that would get back to basics. Educational institutions should require their students to do their homework before they write editorials. The points missed in this case include the following: 1) The U.S. federal government already distributes marijuana as a medicine to a number of people. They do that because some of those patients went to court and proved to a legal certainty that marijuana is the only medicine suitable for their needs. 2) Statements about there not being enough research are signs of abject ignorance. Every major government commission report on drug policy in the last 100 years has concluded that the marijuana laws were based on racism, ignorance and nonsense. They all said the laws should have been repealed long ago because they do more harm than good. You can read them at http://druglibrary.org/schaffer under Major Studies of Drugs and Drug Policy. 3) The AMA takes the stance it does primarily because doctors have learned not to cross the federal government on issues of reefer madness. This policy started in 1925 when doctors were systematically attacked for prescribing opiates - after the Federal Bureau of Narcotics had lost a major Supreme Court case saying it had no business interfering in the practice of medicine. (See http://druglibrary.org/special/king/king1/htm ) In more recent years, it has sought to pull the medical licenses of doctors who even discuss pot with their patients. 4) Marijuana is in Schedule I, but the primary active ingredient is in Schedule III. How does that make sense? 5) The problem is not that the research has not been well publicized. The major government commission reports have been on the Internet for more than 10 years, with a dedicated team of people bringing these to the attention of public officials. The problem is deliberate ignorance - - the people who support marijuana prohibition flatly refuse to read. Test it yourself. Tell some of these drug warriors about the major studies on the Internet. They will give you every excuse in the world why they won't read - but they just won't read. The problem is really bigotry. Clifford A. Schaffer Director, Schaffer Library of Drug Policy Agua Dulce, Calif. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake