reconsiDer: TIDBIT
News coverage has been thin around the country on the medical
marijuana issue as it plays out in the California governor's race. All the major
candidates have endorsed state laws permitting it's use for medical purposes
but, of the three or four front-runners at this time, Schwarzenegger is the only
one to stand out strongly on the issue. A Republican, he would be in a strong
position to force a confrontation between the feds and California. When asked
recently to approve the cutting of scenes of him smoking a joint in the
re-release of his first film, a documentary about his early body-builder years
called "Pumping Iron", Arnold said "No"... the footage stays in.
Source: Alameda Times-Star, The (CA)
Author: Richard Lowry
ARNOLD INTERVIEW MAY
BE VULGAR, BUT HAS THE RIGHT IDEA ON POT
Friday, September 05,
2003 - ARNOLD Schwarzenegger's 1977 interview
with the now-defunct
pornographic magazine Oui is not recommended
reading for anyone without a
strong stomach for vulgarity. But the
interview helps explain the soundness
of one of the actor's
public-policy positions.
Schwarzenegger smoked
marijuana, enjoyed it and still managed to
become an ambitious, intelligent
actor and businessman who built a
sterling career for himself. This must give
him a healthy skepticism
for the unthinking hostility toward marijuana that
infects our
political culture and drives the federal government's lunatic
campaign
against the drug, as if anyone who ever tries it is doomed to become
a
stoner.
The flash point in the marijuana wars at the moment is the
fight over
the medical use of the drug. Schwarzenegger is in favor of
legalizing
it, as are most Californians. The state passed a ballot
initiative
permitting the medical use of marijuana with 55 percent of the
vote in
1996. Eight other states have legalized it as well, creating
friction
with the feds, who don't want grievously ill patients to get relief
if
it means taking the untoward expedient of lighting a joint.
Of
course, if the congressmen who maintain the federal prohibition on
medical
marijuana had to put their heads in toilet bowls several times
a day to vomit
from the effects of chemotherapy, they might be less
categorical in
condemning what some patients do to relieve their
nausea. But the federal
government has never been famous for its
common sense or flexibility, so the
war against medical marijuana
lumbers on, even in the states that have
legalized it.
Since the feds systematically suppress attempts to study
the potential
medical benefits of marijuana, the most important datum in the
debate
is simply this: Some patients say smoking marijuana is the best
way
that they can get relief from the nausea associated with
chemotherapy
and the wasting illness associated with HIV/AIDS. Smoking the
drug
works better for some patients than Marinol pills, which contain
pure
THC and have more side effects.
The New England Journal of
Medicine has advocated the legalization of
medical marijuana. In May, the
journal Lancet Neurology reported that
marijuana's active components
alleviate pain in almost every lab test,
and called it potentially "the
aspirin of the 21st century." Earlier
this year, the New York State
Association of County Health Officials
came out in favor of medical
marijuana.
The ill health effects of marijuana come from inhaling the
smoke into
the lungs. This isn't a problem if the use is only short-term, or
if
the user has a terminal disease. Consumer Reports (no less)
writes
"that for patients with advanced AIDS and terminal cancer,
the
apparent benefits some derive from smoking marijuana outweigh
any
substantiated or even suspected risks."
Drug warriors worry that
permitting medical marijuana "sends the wrong
message" to teenagers. But the
popularity of various drugs among youth
moves in broad patterns that are not
readily influenced by what
federal "drug czar" John Walters says or does. And
the fact is that -
God bless them - cancer and AIDS patients aren't
glamorous, and are
unlikely to prompt an epidemic of youth pot
smoking.
Might medical marijuana be abused? Of course. That's also true
of a
host of prescription drugs. But don't tell Walters. Next he will
be
trying to deny patients the use of morphine and OxyContin.
What
drug warriors really fear is that if medical marijuana is
permitted, it will
harm their effort to depict marijuana as utterly
nefarious and create the
opening for a more rational debate about the
legal status of the drug. The
drug warriors are already losing ground.
The National Organization for the
Reform of Marijuana Laws recently
celebrated a vote in Congress that had 152
members voting to ease the
federal crackdown on medical
marijuana.
That's progress, although the cause still needs a
high-profile
spokesman. If it happens to be a formerly swinging
California
bodybuilder who enjoyed the 1970s a little too much, so be
it.
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