Spliff Twister
New Member
WAITING TO INHALE
YVONNE Westbrook of Oakland uses medical marijuana to control the
spasms of multiple sclerosis. Valium left her with a heavy, drugged
feeling. "A few tokes and the spasticity calms right down," she noted
in the documentary "Waiting to Inhale," which will be shown at the
Oakland International Film Festival on Thursday.
Irvin Rosenfeld sees marijuana as "a muscle relaxing
anti-inflammatory" that helps him with multiple congenital
cartilaginous exostosis. Without it, he explains, he would be dead or
on disability, not a stockbroker who pays taxes.
Berkeley's Jed Riffe, who made the documentary, also taped a debate
in Washington, D.C., last week on medical marijuana. David Murray
from the White House drug czar's office spoke against legalization of
marijuana, while two drug-war opponents, Rob Kampia, executive
director of the Marijuana Policy Project, and Ethan Nadelmann,
executive director of the Drug Policy Alliance, spoke in its favor.
Murray was not exactly in an enviable position. A former colleague
had canceled last minute. So there he was, taking an unpopular
position alone, debating two opponents and a moderator sympathetic to
legalization, columnist Clarence Page, as well as an audience filled
with people who -- I'm guessing here -- either just want to smoke pot
to get high or (worse for Murray) have a sick loved one such as
Westbrook or Rosenfeld.
(Riffe tells me he issued tickets to both sides so the audience would
be balanced, but apparently the pro-medical marijuana crowd was more
motivated.)
Murray argued that doctors are not "the principal proponent" of
pushing "smoked marijuana as medicine." True, the American Medical
Association isn't pushing for medical marijuana. But the California
Medical Association has supported medical marijuana. More important,
doctors across the country have recommended marijuana to patients --
at the risk of their own careers.
Indeed, it was doctors who sued first the Clinton administration,
then the Bush administration, to fight federal efforts to keep them
from recommending marijuana, as permitted by Proposition 215, the
medical marijuana measure passed by California voters in 1996. The
doctors won. And here's something I learned from Nadelmann: the
federal government had to pay more than $700,000 to reimburse groups
such as his for the legal fees they incurred fighting the bad policy.
Last year, however, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that the federal
government can prosecute medical-marijuana patients even in states
that have legalized medical marijuana. Too bad for sick people:
Federal law trumps state law.
Murray sees that as a good thing. Opponents of legal medical
marijuana argue that it can increase teen recreational usage. Kampia
countered that California teen marijuana usage actually has declined
since 1996. But Murray scored a point when he noted that if marijuana
becomes "normalized," usage will go up.
Personally, I think marijuana use should not be a crime for anyone,
sick or not. But medical marijuana is a separate issue. And the
government has managed to outlaw more serious drugs -- morphine,
cocaine -- while allowing doctors to prescribe them when necessary.
When you watch "Waiting to Inhale," you see how much the medical
marijuana debate is about completely different approaches --
corporate/government versus homeopathic.
Murray argued that marijuana should have to go through all the
regulatory hurdles that other drugs must pass. Take Marinol, a legal
pill-form of marijuana that is FDA approved.
But many users claim they use marijuana because it has freed them
from costly and sometimes overly powerful prescription drugs. One
plus for marijuana is its ability to titrate: Smokers can instantly
determine the dosage they need, whereas if they take Marinol, they
have to wait an hour or more to see if they took enough, too little
or too much.
Epileptic Valerie Corral of the Santa Cruz marijuana collective WAMM
said that "living under pharmaceuticals" was like living under water.
And: "To think that there was something I could grow myself that cost
me absolutely nothing." For Corral, growing marijuana is like growing
aloe vera to relieve sunburn -- there is no regulation, no
pharmaceutical company, and no need for it.
Newshawk: Spliff Twister - www.420times.com
Source: San Francisco Chronicle (CA)
Pubdate: Tue, 19 Sep 2006
Copyright: 2006 Hearst Communications Inc.
Contact: letters@sfchronicle.com
Website: Home
YVONNE Westbrook of Oakland uses medical marijuana to control the
spasms of multiple sclerosis. Valium left her with a heavy, drugged
feeling. "A few tokes and the spasticity calms right down," she noted
in the documentary "Waiting to Inhale," which will be shown at the
Oakland International Film Festival on Thursday.
Irvin Rosenfeld sees marijuana as "a muscle relaxing
anti-inflammatory" that helps him with multiple congenital
cartilaginous exostosis. Without it, he explains, he would be dead or
on disability, not a stockbroker who pays taxes.
Berkeley's Jed Riffe, who made the documentary, also taped a debate
in Washington, D.C., last week on medical marijuana. David Murray
from the White House drug czar's office spoke against legalization of
marijuana, while two drug-war opponents, Rob Kampia, executive
director of the Marijuana Policy Project, and Ethan Nadelmann,
executive director of the Drug Policy Alliance, spoke in its favor.
Murray was not exactly in an enviable position. A former colleague
had canceled last minute. So there he was, taking an unpopular
position alone, debating two opponents and a moderator sympathetic to
legalization, columnist Clarence Page, as well as an audience filled
with people who -- I'm guessing here -- either just want to smoke pot
to get high or (worse for Murray) have a sick loved one such as
Westbrook or Rosenfeld.
(Riffe tells me he issued tickets to both sides so the audience would
be balanced, but apparently the pro-medical marijuana crowd was more
motivated.)
Murray argued that doctors are not "the principal proponent" of
pushing "smoked marijuana as medicine." True, the American Medical
Association isn't pushing for medical marijuana. But the California
Medical Association has supported medical marijuana. More important,
doctors across the country have recommended marijuana to patients --
at the risk of their own careers.
Indeed, it was doctors who sued first the Clinton administration,
then the Bush administration, to fight federal efforts to keep them
from recommending marijuana, as permitted by Proposition 215, the
medical marijuana measure passed by California voters in 1996. The
doctors won. And here's something I learned from Nadelmann: the
federal government had to pay more than $700,000 to reimburse groups
such as his for the legal fees they incurred fighting the bad policy.
Last year, however, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that the federal
government can prosecute medical-marijuana patients even in states
that have legalized medical marijuana. Too bad for sick people:
Federal law trumps state law.
Murray sees that as a good thing. Opponents of legal medical
marijuana argue that it can increase teen recreational usage. Kampia
countered that California teen marijuana usage actually has declined
since 1996. But Murray scored a point when he noted that if marijuana
becomes "normalized," usage will go up.
Personally, I think marijuana use should not be a crime for anyone,
sick or not. But medical marijuana is a separate issue. And the
government has managed to outlaw more serious drugs -- morphine,
cocaine -- while allowing doctors to prescribe them when necessary.
When you watch "Waiting to Inhale," you see how much the medical
marijuana debate is about completely different approaches --
corporate/government versus homeopathic.
Murray argued that marijuana should have to go through all the
regulatory hurdles that other drugs must pass. Take Marinol, a legal
pill-form of marijuana that is FDA approved.
But many users claim they use marijuana because it has freed them
from costly and sometimes overly powerful prescription drugs. One
plus for marijuana is its ability to titrate: Smokers can instantly
determine the dosage they need, whereas if they take Marinol, they
have to wait an hour or more to see if they took enough, too little
or too much.
Epileptic Valerie Corral of the Santa Cruz marijuana collective WAMM
said that "living under pharmaceuticals" was like living under water.
And: "To think that there was something I could grow myself that cost
me absolutely nothing." For Corral, growing marijuana is like growing
aloe vera to relieve sunburn -- there is no regulation, no
pharmaceutical company, and no need for it.
Newshawk: Spliff Twister - www.420times.com
Source: San Francisco Chronicle (CA)
Pubdate: Tue, 19 Sep 2006
Copyright: 2006 Hearst Communications Inc.
Contact: letters@sfchronicle.com
Website: Home