Source: Canberra Times (Australia) Contact: http://www.canberratimes.com.au/ Pubdate: 17 Nov 1998 Author: G. T. W. Agnew Copyright: Canberra Times 1998 DRUGS USED WISELY IN GOOD OLD DAYS JOHN MILLER, of the Christian Democratic Party, thundered on the Letters page (CT, 12 November) that "medicalised marijuana is the advance commando force being mobilised to capture . . . the final objective of legalising illicit drugs". As any of the cancer patients who have gained relief from marijuana can tell him, "medicalised marijuana" is nothing of the sort. The truth is that "medicalised" marijuana is only a return to the good old days when, among other things, Australians went to church in droves. Back then, when neither marijuana nor heroin was against the law, there was no drug problem. Such marijuana as there was would have eased the pain of the few who had the bright idea of smoking it, but most people would never have heard of it until they were told it was banned, when the sermons against it began. The "illicit" drug which really undermines the fulminations of John Miller and his ilk, however, is heroin. Before 1953 it was an ingredient in Australia's most popular medicines; John Miller's parents would have consumed it quite freely. And before 1953 there was no heroin problem. - --- Checked-by: Pat Dolan