Pubdate: Fri, 21 Mar 2008 Source: Stuart News, The (FL) Copyright: 2008 E.W. Scripps Co. Contact: http://www.tcpalm.com/tcp/stuart_news/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/612 Author: George W. Iliff FLORIDA BEHIND OTHER STATES ON MARIJUANA LAWS This spring, Minnesota is expected to become the 13th state to legalize medical marijuana. Efforts are underway to make medical marijuana legal in six other states, including New York. This progress is understandable since marijuana is a valuable treatment for the nausea and lack of appetite of people with AIDS or undergoing chemotherapy. It can alleviate pain in a number of illnesses. It is advocated by many medical associations, nurse associations and the like. And, in New York, 76 percent of voters favor legalizing medical marijuana. To date, 11 states have decriminalized marijuana and four other states are considering this option. Again, this progress is understandable because marijuana is a benign drug that has been used by nearly 100 million people and has never killed even one person. In fact, according to government statistics, roughly 16 million people currently smoke marijuana without any apparent adverse effect. In 1969, President Richard Nixon appointed Pennsylvania Gov. Ray Shafer to lead a Commission on Marijuana and Drug Abuse. After months of testimony from medical experts, lawmen and health officials, the report concluded: "Marijuana use in and of itself, is neither causative of nor directly related with crime." It found no basis for the gateway theory. Alcohol, it said, was probably a greater danger and recommended that personal use of marijuana should no longer be a crime. This report, as with many similar reports, was ignored by the government, which continues to portray marijuana as an extremely dangerous drug. Our Gov. Charlie Crist does not want to change Florida's draconian marijuana laws even though he himself smoked marijuana when younger. (Hypocrisy is alive and well.) As a result, 700,000 marijuana arrests are made each year; our prisons are filled to overflowing; many young lives are ruined and medical marijuana is denied to the sick. George W. Iliff Port St Lucie - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin