Pubdate: Thu, 02 Nov 2006 Source: Argus Leader (Sioux Falls, SD) Copyright: 2006 Argus Leader Contact: http://www.argusleader.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/842 Author: Valerie Hannah DON'T FEAR MEDICAL MARIJUANA I have read and listened to various views on Initiated Measure 4, the medical marijuana initiative, and what I've noticed from the folks against this is that their only real message is fear. This is for sick and dying people, not people with routine medical concerns. Someone with chronic pain usually has a severe medical condition that causes it, a condition that by definition can't be cured or relieved by ordinary treatments. I'm one of them, a Gulf War veteran exposed to nerve agents. As a result, I suffer from a degenerative muscular disease that ended my career and will likely cut my life short. I've been prescribed virtually every FDA-approved narcotic and opiate. These prescription painkillers not only have failed to relieve my deep inner-muscle pain, they left me in a fog, unable to function. I could even not remember what my family said the day before. Moderate amounts of medical marijuana ease my pain and suffering while still allowing me to interact with my family and friends and remember and enjoy those moments that soon will be gone. In a White House-commissioned report on medical marijuana, the Institute of Medicine found "there will likely always be a subpopulation of patients who do not respond well to other medications." That's me. The claims that marijuana is a gateway drug, and that letting patients use it will somehow lead to mass drug addiction, are ridiculous. The biggest advantage of medical marijuana is that it is not highly addictive. Equally wrong is the suggestion that allowing the use of medical marijuana will increase teen marijuana use. Eleven states have medical marijuana laws, and none have seen an increase in teen use. In fact, teen use has dropped almost across the board. This is an issue of compassion. That's why numerous religious denominations - including the Episcopal Church, the Presbyterian Church (USA) and the Methodist Church - support allowing the medicinal use of marijuana. Vote "yes" on Measure 4. Valerie Hannah Hill City - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake