Pubdate: Sun, 15 Jun 2003 Source: St. Petersburg Times (FL) Copyright: 2003 St. Petersburg Times Contact: http://www.sptimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/419 Author: Stephen Heath THE FUNDAMENTAL QUESTION Re: Reefer sadness, letter, June 8. Letter writer Calvina Fay's attempts to discredit Robyn Blumner's succinct commentary of June 1 ignore the fundamental question raised by Blumner. That is, should government officials be allowed to use tax dollars for either promoting or discouraging individual political candidates and/or ballot initiatives? The answer, constitutionally, of course is no. This is why four days after Blumner's column ran, the House Government Reform Committee agreed in a simple voice vote to drop the language allowing such nefarious actions by federal drug czar John Walters. Antimarijuana zealots continue to distort the discussion of allowing legal access to medical marijuana by citing their beliefs about marijuana's danger to children. This ignores the reality that affected patients are not children, but adults - most with serious illnesses like cancer, AIDS-wasting, multiple sclerosis and ALS. The only pertinent question related to allowing legal access to medical marijuana is this: Should medical patients who elect to use marijuana with their doctor's recommendation be subject to arrest, criminal prosecution and being caged behind steel bars like an animal? It's clear that Ms. Fay, George W. Bush and U.S. Attorney General John Ashcroft believe the answer to this question is yes. Fortunately, almost 80 percent of Americans believe this response to be heartless and draconian, which is why the laws have been changed in nine different states to legalize medical pot. Additionally, the Republican governor of Maryland just signed a bill reducing the penalty for medical marijuana possession to a $100 fine. Canada last year not only agreed to legalize medical use, but also is well on the way to distributing government grown marijuana to qualified patients. Federal officials who see these rational changes to reefer-madness hysteria are willing to do anything, regardless of whether it is constitutional, to stop this inevitable tide of legal change here in America. STEPHEN HEATH public relations director, Drug Policy Forum of Florida, Clearwater - --- MAP posted-by: SHeath(DPFFlorida)