If you don't get it, you must be high
Of the many hot-button issues that are bouncing around the
rhetoric filled rooms of the state Capitol as of late, one that caught my attention
as being particularly egregious is that of the roadblocks being placed in the way
of the legalization of medical marijuana via House Bill 1653 and Senate Bill 1003. This is, unfortunately, another case of our
legislators, including those in
leadership positions, being completely blind to the interests of the public. A
nationwide Gallup poll in November of 2005 showed that 78 percent of Americans
believe in the legalization of the drug for medical purposes, and a 2010 poll from Franklin and Marshall College found that 80 percent of Pennsylvanians
support allowing medical authorization of marijuana.
Numerous medical organizations support the access to medical
marijuana for the ill, including the American College of Physicians, the
American Public Health Association, and the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society. The
benefits to legalizing the drug far outweigh the minimal risks, which are, in
most cases, overblown and anecdotal, with very little basis in fact. Many
substances which are otherwise highly illegal, such as cocaine and morphine,
are used regularly in hospitals, so why not marijuana? Allowing those who are suffering from cancer,
glaucoma, chronic pain, epilepsy, or many other diseases access to this drug
would be a great boon. Chemotherapy patients who are too sick to eat or swallow
pills sometimes find marijuana an effective treatment. Studies have shown that marijuana relieves
nausea, appetite loss, and severe pain. It also has been shown to increase the
chances that HIV/AIDS and hepatitis C patients will stay on life-saving
medications.
This is personal for me because I have dealt with epilepsy
and would have considered medical marijuana, were it a legal option. Many of
the opponents to legalization attempt to propose legal alternatives but do not
take into account the fact that these alternatives are too expensive, too
addictive, and have difficult side effects.
Many of the issues raised by opponents of legalization have,
as per usual, very little basis in fact. It has been shown, time and again,
that marijuana is actually a very safe drug, safer in fact than our old friend
Tylenol: there are no medically documented cases of overdose deaths from
marijuana, while over 500 overdose deaths from Tylenol are registered per year.
The old bugaboo,
“marijuana as gateway drug” has also been gradually undermined. A new studyfrom the University of New Hampshire seems to show that teenagers who smoke pot
and move on to other, harmful drugs has more to do with outside factors such as
employment status and stress. It appears that those students who do not finish
high school, do not attend college, and do not seek gainful employment are more
likely to pursue more…sundry activities to fill their time. Interestingly, age
also seems to close this “gateway”, with these effects subsiding in most people
by the age of 21.
In the
end, our legislature will have to realize that this is an issue of
compassionate action. There are many
people who are suffering with horrible conditions much worse than mine that
could be relieved by the simple administration of this drug. Just like my
decision on what medicine to take for my seizures, it is a private issue, one
that should be decided between a person and their physician, not their
government.
Evan Stultz, ACLU-PA volunteer, Harrisburg
Labels: drug law reform, medical marijuana, state legislature
4 Comments:
Excellent article. Well thought!
Yes!Its only right we support cannabis.Lets save the earth.
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As an Epileptic myself i thank you for writing this article, and i will tell you from personal experiences that Cannabis has been the best anti-epileptic i have used thus far. I was a California resident at the time. Unlike the other 12 medication i was taking it has little to no side effect and completely controlled my seizures and Aura (although the first couple times i had bad giggles). I look forward to this becoming a legal, safer and cheaper alternative in the State of Pa .
As time goes by, I believe more strongly each day that this is a civil rights issue. It is apparent that most people that are opposed to reform do so based on some moral or ideological grounds that it is bad for individuals and society, rather than acknowledging medical science and the testimony of experienced responsible users. This being the case, we are subjected to the same kind of discrimination that other groups in society have felt in their own struggles for equality, those being women, blacks (African-Americans plus others), LGBT's, Hispanics, etc. While some members of law enforcement admit they are merely enforcing the law, and will change their attitude if the laws change, it is clear that the major body of law enforcement, both individuals and groups, are involved in opposition to reform, either in opinion or in action. Actions against reform, from law enforcement and other groups, in spite of medical science and major public opinion, manifest evidence of prejudice against marijuana users.
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