Pubdate: Fri, 10 Jan 1997 Source: Rocky Mountain News (CO) Author: Gregory Daurer Although I applaud the sentiment that our war on drugs has hindered the ability of physicians to provide adequate pain relief, the News' Dec. 29 editorial "States' rights and pot" proves, overall, to be as muddled as the federal government's own policy regarding medical marijuana. The editorial asserts that pot-prescription laws in Arizona and California are misguided, that there are better drugs than cannabis available for life- and sense-threatening illnesses. On the contrary, marijuana is sometimes the *best* medicine -- that's why six individuals legally receive marijuana from the federal goverment to smoke for glaucoma and other diseases. (Yes, *only* six.) The wake-up call from Arizona and California is that states are justifiably choosing to expand this prescription policy, which the federal government, in its duplicity, is trying to scuttle. The editorial also implies that there is a contradiction in allowing medical marijuana to be dispensed, since society also implores youth to refrain from trying it. I'd remind you that cocaine and morphine are prescription drugs, and we rightly ask children to avoid those substances on the street. We don't, however, banish them from the pharmacopoeia or relegate the use of such compounds to only six people. I'd be more comfortable allowing doctors to decide whether medicinal marijuana works than editors at the News or the nation's drug czars. Gregory Daurer Denver