Pubdate: Thur, 9 Sept 1999 Source: New Haven Register (CT) Copyright: 1999, New Haven Register Contact: http://www.ctcentral.com/cgi-bin/w3com/start?ctcentral+FrontPage Forum: http://www.ctcentral.com/ Author: Mike Gogulski ANOTHER STUDY FINDS POT HYSTERIA BASELESS To the editor: For several years, the official mouthpieces of American drug policy have used scare tactics and a curiously selective sort of science to dissuade voters from supporting medicinal marijuana initiatives. Drug czar Barry McCaffrey even went so far as to call the 1996 California initiative "Cheech and Chong medicine," and suggested repeatedly that allowing adults with serious medical conditions to use marijuana to ease suffering would amount to giving license to children to use the drug. Recently, the Department of Health and Human Services released the annual National Household Survey on Drug Abuse. The numbers are in. Even though medicinal marijuana has been a headline issue since 1996, marijuana use in America (particularly among young people) has been decreasing since 1997.In March, the Institute of Medicine's report on medicinal marijuana, in addition to exonerating the drug of its most feared qualities, suggested the same tired old policy response to the marijuana issue that has come out of dozens of studies in the past: The federal government still needs more studies and more research before it can come to the same simple conclusion that some 70 percent of Americans have -- if you believe the polls -- that it's OK to stop arresting people and putting them in jail for using marijuana for their ailments. The report also laid to rest the "gateway" theory that marijuana use leads to the use and abuse of harder drugs. How many more studies will it take, America? MIKE GOGULSKI Hamden ~~~~~~~~~~~ Editor's Note: Mike Gogulski Is President Of The Connecticut Cannabis Policy Forum. - --- MAP posted-by: manemez j lovitto