Pubdate: Tues 2 Feb 1999 Source: Arkansas Democrat-Gazette (AR) Contact: http://www.ardemgaz.com/ Copyright: 1999, Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, Inc. Author: John R. Starr, former managing editor of the Democrat-Gazette. PUTTING 'POT' TO PRODUCTIVE USE I sat down at my writing machine Monday with the worst case of writer's block I've had since I got into the newspaper business. Writer's block is the expression for a writer's inability to put anything on paper (or, in this case, into the computer's memory). The last time I suffered from writer's block this bad, I was 20 years old and trying to write fiction at Norma's parents' home in Pine Bluff. At that time, writer's block wasn't as dangerous. There was no deadline for the material I was producing. Nobody except me would care if I didn't write another short story. The argument could be made that nobody cares if I never write another column, but I'm not going to get into that. In the 20 years I have been writing a column for the Arkansas Democrat and the Democrat-Gazette, I remember having writer's block only two or three times, and each time I panicked. Each time, something happened before the absolute deadline for the column that I wanted to write about. One reason I am so seldom bereft of ideas is that I maintain a file called "Column notes" that contains clippings, letters and other material on subjects that I plan to write about someday. Alas, that file is in Arkansas, and I am in Florida. Maybe this is the day I should endorse use of marijuana for medical purposes. The scientists say marijuana helps terminally ill patients withstand pain. Half a dozen states have legalized use of marijuana for medical purposes, but the federal government is fighting in court to keep the states from implementing the laws. Bill Clinton, the man who once said, "I feel your pain," is leading the fight against relief for thousands of dying patients. The next time he talks about feeling others' pain, someone should shout at him, "Yeah, but you're not going to do anything about it, you hypocrite." Is he afraid that terminally ill patients will become addicts? There is pretty firm evidence that marijuana reduces pain from some affliction that is not terminal. I'd approve medical marijuana for anybody afflicted with constant pain, including people suffering with AIDS. If I were pushed, I'm not too sure that I wouldn't be for legalizing marijuana on the streets. The word is that anyone who wants it and can pay the drug dealer's inflated price can get marijuana on almost any street corner. In other words, people willing to risk becoming criminals can get marijuana. People with the pain of terminal illness can't. Using marijuana is a victimless crime. No one is harmed except the user. Yes, it is a drug, but so are cigarettes and alcohol, and both are legal. Both are more deadly than marijuana. We have too many victimless crimes in this country. Most of them are based on a puritan ethic that no longer guides the country. We spend several billion dollars housing people convicted of victimless crimes. It doesn't make sense. I take drugs for pain prescribed by my doctor. It is illegal to possess these drugs without a prescription. It is also unlawful to trade them on the street. Why should marijuana be treated differently? Unlike our president, I have never experimented with drugs, mostly because they were illegal and I held positions that were not compatible with breaking the law. I've said I'll try it if I ever get to a country where it is legal, and I will. If it reduces my pain, I'm going to come back and do what I can to help those groups that are trying to legalize it. I'm sure that the millions suffering from chronic pain are going to like this idea. Millions who, like Clinton, speak of compassion but have none in their hearts will oppose it. But using marijuana for medical purposes is an idea whose time has come. The puritans may fight long and hard, just as they did against pornography in the movies and on television, but eventually they will lose. A nation that gives 67 percent support to a president who lies just because the economy is good is already morally bankrupt. If marijuana were legalized, the government could control it better. It could also tax the product. I'd suggest a heavy tax, one that would make marijuana almost as expensive as it is on the black market, with all proceeds dedicated to paying down the national debt. Something as radical as this is the only way we'll ever pay down the debt. You have noticed, haven't you, that Democrats want to spend all the surplus? Republicans want to spend most of it with a pittance set aside for a tax cut. Neither side is proposing that we start paying off the national debt. It's time somebody did. - --- MAP posted-by: Rich O'Grady