Pubdate: Sun, 04 Apr 1999 Date: 04/04/1999 Source: Washington Post (DC) Author: James E. Gierach Re: “Medical Marijuana” (4/3/99 Editorial) As a visitor to the nation’s capital to see my daughter for the Easter holiday, it was disappointing to read the ifs-ands-and-buts “Medical Marijuana” editorial (4/3/99) in The Washington Post. Our national leaders have so politicized drug-war issues that most Americans would like to see thoughtful and unequivocal editorial support for medical marijuana and a rejection of further foot-dragging in the delivery of effective medicine to a segment of the sick and dying. That smoked marijuana is a crude delivery system, and an irritant to the anti-smoking and the anti-drug stalwarts, does not justify the actions of government leaders who wilfully obstruct the delivery of effective medicine to the sick. Based upon the marijuana trials of millions upon millions of Americans, there is little reason to be fearful of a general relaxation of marijuana drug laws. And based upon mounds of anecdotal evidence and the latest expert report -- this time, the Institute of Medicine report -- there is little reason to be skeptical of the benefits of smoked marijuana. Indeed, at this point in time, it would be better to err on the side of a smoking Camel, a coughing Marboro man or appetite-enhancing marijuana brownie than continue witchcraft politics that prohibit medicinal marijuana. It is wrongheaded for national leaders, editorial boards and drug czars to lag so far behind an informed public opinion on the medical marijuana question. And lag they do, as evidenced repeatedly in state and District of Columbia referenda. The drug-war whipping boy has been flogged long enough, especially in the marijuana department. If tight controls and Class-I scheduling nonsense continue, then, for an important segment of the sick and suffering, the streets will continue to be a more viable refuge from chronic pain and nausea than the family doctor’s office. A sluggish further delay by the U.S. Congress and state legislatures in making medical marijuana freely available to all those who might benefit is cruel and wrong. The denial of a medical marijuana prescription to a patient who needs one will only add to the long list of patients who were caught in drug-war crossfire and treated by physicians practicing with one hand tied behind their backs. James E. Gierach Attorney at Law 9759 Southwest Highway Oak Lawn, IL 60453 B. (708) 424-1600