From: [f--ca--t] at [primus.paranoia.com] (Tommy Ranks)
Newsgroups: rec.drugs.misc,rec.drugs.cannabis,rec.drugs.psychedelic,alt.drugs,alt.drugs.hard,alt.drugs.pot,alt.drugs.psychedelics,alt.slack,alt.wired
Subject: FAQ: Drug Legalization (Alternatives to the War on Drugs)
Date: 3 Nov 1996 22:15:41 GMT

ALTERNATIVES TO THE WAR ON DRUGS
----------------------------------
(Legalization FAQ)
last update: Oct.1/96

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i. Introduction

1. Prioritizing Resources
2. Harm Reduction
3. The Dutch Approach
4. Decriminalization
5. Marijuana Decriminalization, then Legalization
6. Legalization
7. Full Legalization / the 'Supermarket' model

Appendix A: Forfeiture and Mandatory Minimums
Appendix B: Industrial Hemp and Medical Marijuana

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i. Introduction

    It's clear to many that the War on Drugs isn't working, but 
the alternatives are often confusing.  Legalization, 
decriminalization, and harm reduction aren't widely-understood 
concepts, so the whole thing's usually assumed to be a big 
mess best left to experts.  Inevitably, someone whips up 
another drug scare, and we're stuck with the stalemate of
the War on Drugs for another decade.

    This file has been put together to help make clearer the
different ways that current American drug policy could be 
changed; please distribute it as widely as possible.  If you have 
suggestions, corrections, or additions, contact me at: 
[t p d] at [geocities.com]   This document will reside on the 
talk.politics.drugs FAQ site at:
    http://www.geocities.com/CapitolHill/4727

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1. Prioritizing Resources

    'Because we live in a world of limited resources, it is not 
possible to do everything.  It is therefore both logical and 
necessary to make distinctions among things that are more or 
less important.  I have in mind at least five basic dichotomies:
    1. drug use by children (top priority) versus drug use by 
adults (low priority);
    2. marijuana smoking (low priority) versus use of harder 
drugs (higher priority);
    3. public use of drugs (high priority) versus private use of 
drugs at home (low priority);
    4. drug consumption (no priority) versus drug impairment 
(high priority);
    5. occasional use (low priority) versus chronic or dependent 
use (higher priority).
    'From these general criteria for drug policy, I would 
commend to the National Commission five specific goals for an 
effective, principled drug policy:
    '1._Protect the Children_.  I think this priority is self-evident 
and needs no discussion.  I would simply add that this is the 
only domain in which 'zero tolerance' makes any sense at all 
and might even be feasible if enforcement resources were 
concentrated on this as a top priority.
    '2._Get Tough on the Legal Drugs_.  It is common 
knowledge that alcohol (100,000 annual deaths) and tobacco 
(360,000 annual deaths) far exceed the illegal drugs as sources 
of death, disease, and dysfunction in the U.S...  I am not, 
however, suggesting prohibition of these drugs.  That is wrong 
in principle and impossible in practice, as experience teaches.  
Nonetheless, there are more restrictive measure that can and 
should be undertaken...
    '3. _Public Safety and Order_.  Here we need policies 
directed toward protection of the public from accident and injury 
on the highway, in the workplace and from unruly disruptions in 
public streets, public transport, parks and other gathering places.  
Programs specifically tailored to accomplish this more focused 
goal make a lot more sense than futile and counter productive 
'zero tolerance' approaches.  Street-level law enforcement 
practices need to be reviewed to see to what extent they may 
actually enourage hustling drugs in the street to avoid arrests and 
forfeitures that might follow from fixed points of sale...
    '4. _Protect Public Health_.  The emphasis here is on the 
word 'public'.  Policy should be directed toward 1. treatment of 
addicts on a voluntary basis and 2. true epidemiological 
concerns such as the use of drugs by pregnant women and the 
potential for transmission of AIDS by I.V. drug users.  
Addiction treatment is now shamefully underfunded, with 
months-long waiting lists in many cities.  Purely individualized 
risks are not in principle a public health matter and are in any 
case trivial in magnitude compared to those now accepted from 
alcohol and tobacco...
    '5. _Respect the Value of Individual Liberty and 
Responsibility_.  The current administration's goal of a drug-
free America, except for children, is both ridiculous -- as absurd 
as a liquor-free America -- and wrong in principle.  This is not 
fundamentalist Ayatollah Land after all.  A democratic society 
must respect the decisions made by its adult citizens, even those 
perceived to be foolish or risky...  To say that something is 
'dangerous' does not automatically supply a reason to outlaw it.  
Indeed, the general presumption in our society is that competent 
adults, with access to necessary information, are entitled to take 
risks of this kind as part of the right to life, liberty, and the 
pursuit of happiness.'

 -- Prepared Statement of Steven Wisotsky, 
    Professor of Law, Nova University Law Center,
    before the select committee on Narcotics Abuse and
    Control, House of Representatives,
    Concerning: A New Beginning in U.S. Drug Policy,
    September 29th, 1988.
    http://www.paranoia.com/drugs/war.on.drugs/debate/wisotsky1
    http://www.paranoia.com/drugs/war.on.drugs/debate/wisotsky2



2. Harm Reduction

    'The theory of harm reduction emerges out of the community-
based, public health interventions that support substance users 
and their communities in reducing drug-related harm. It 
challenges the traditional social service provision and 
moral/criminal/disease models of drug use by focusing on 
maximizing individual and community health through 
participation and ownership rather than repression and 
incarceration. Harm Reduction identifies the practices and beliefs 
which endanger individuals and communities, and works in a 
collaborative manner. Practitioners of harm reduction distinguish 
themselves from other service providers by their willingness to 
engage non-judgmentally with all people, regardless of personal 
values, and to face with them the harm done to and by them.'

-- Harm Reduction Coalition,
    'Harm Reduction: An Introduction',
    http://www.cts.com:80/~habtsmrt/hrc/hrc.html


    'The harm reduction model upholds that abstinence is the 
ideal goal for those using illegal drugs. Abstinence from drugs 
reduces drug-related harm completely. It is hoped that all 
individuals who use illicit substances will eventually come to 
give them up entirely. Proponents of Harm Reduction recognize, 
however, that there will always be illicit drug use (unless we can 
successfully eliminate every psychoactive plant and synthetic 
relative from the face of the planet) and that many people are 
simply unwilling or unable to give up drugs entirely but 
nonetheless could benefit from intervention...
    'Working with addicts from a harm reduction perspective 
involves accepting that some people simply are not going to give 
up drugs at this time. Offering them services nonetheless, opens 
the door to helping these people reduce harm in some way--even 
an infinitesimal way--that wouldn't otherwise occur. Small 
reductions of harm are better than no reduction (and definitely 
better than exacerbation). An open door policy can result in a 
harm reduction snowball effect: small improvement can pave the 
path for further reduction of drug use and an improved lifestyle 
in other ways. This snowball effect can continue, eventually to 
the point of abstinence.'

 -- Robert Westermeyer, Ph.D.,
    'Harm Reduction and Illicit Drug Use',
    http://www.cts.com/~habtsmrt/drugs.html



3. The Dutch Approach

    'Dutch drug policy aims to maintain a separation between the 
market for soft drugs (cannabis products such as hashish and 
marijuana) and the market for harder substances (such as heroin 
and cocaine). This is effectuated by allowing some limited 
freedom of movement for the retail trade and the possession of 
small quantities of soft drugs for individual consumption, and 
by trying to combat the hard drug trade in every possible way...
    'Penal provisions for soft drug delicts are considerably milder 
than those for hard drugs. Moreover, a distinction is made 
between drug users and traffickers. The (border-crossing) drug 
trade has a high priority and great efforts are made to keep users 
out of the illegal circuit. Possession of soft drugs and hard drugs 
for commercial purposes is therefore considered a more serious 
offence than possession for individual consumption... 
    'Over the years the above mentioned legislation has lead to the 
establishment of the so-called coffee shops where trading in soft 
drugs on certain conditions is not prosecuted. Trade in hard 
drugs, however, is strictly prohibited. Thus the cannabis 
consumer is not dependent on multi-drug markets which reduces 
the risk of switching to harder substances... 
    'The majority of the coffee shops adheres to nation-wide 
criteria ('Regulations'). The closing down of a number of coffee 
shops and a more rigid police control in recent years have shown 
that these criteria are strictly maintained... 
    'Prevention, information and education are a primary concern 
of the Dutch drug policy. In 1991 the project  'Healthy schools 
and stimulants' was launched, specifically aiming at the 
Secundary School students. The project is carried out in 
coperation with the Netherlands Institute for Alcohol and Drugs, 
the local and provincial Public Health Services and the 
municipalities. The project provides information on 
subsequently tobacco, alcohol, cannabis and gambling for 
Secondary School students of an age when they generally have 
their first contacts with these items.' 

 -- Netherlands Institute for Alcohol and Drugs (NIAD),
    Dutch Cannabis Policy Factsheet, 
    http://www.niad.nl/fc1uk.htm



4. Decriminalization

    '_Decriminalization_ - As the word itself indicates, 
decriminalization involves freeing the drug user/possessor from 
criminal status, and limits the punishment for drug possession 
(under a certain amount) to a citation and minimal fine. As 
passed in eleven U.S. states (Alaska, Oregon, Colorado, 
California, New York, Nebraska, Maine, Mississippi, Ohio, 
Minnesota, and North Carolina), decriminalization maintains the 
felony status of cultivating, distributing, and trafficking 
marijuana, but eliminates the incarceration of possessors of 
small amounts of drug for personal use.'

 -- NASRO Issue Brief, Spring 1995 vol. 1, no.1,
    'Rethinking the War on Drugs and Crime: New Approaches
      to Local Policy'.
    http://www.dscc.org/cwa/report.html



5. Marijuana Decriminalization, then Legalization

    'A. Step One
    'Decriminalizing the use of marijuana amounts to what can be 
described as a half-law -- it is on the 'books' but not enforced.  
Several states have realized the futility of enforcement as well as 
the exorbitant demand for the drug and, as a result, have 
decriminalized marijuana on that basis.  The time has come for a 
federal recognition of those facts.  A law which labels 18 million 
users as criminal is absurd.
    'B. Step Two
    'Following the inevitable success of the decriminalization 
experiment should be the complete legalization of marijuana.  
This stage would act as the real test.  Distribution and taxation of 
the drug would be handled the same way alcohol is dispensed -- 
through licensed sellers.  Restrictions on time, place, and 
manner of sale would also apply, just as with alcohol.  Public 
ingestion would be strictly prohibited, as would the sale of 
marijuana in places of public accomodation.  Furthermore, stiff 
penalties for driving while under the influence of marijuana 
would be strictly enforced.

 -- Todd Austin Brenner,
    'The Legalization of Drugs: Why Prolong the Inevitable?'
    _Capital University Law Review_, vol.18, 1989



6. Legalization

    '_Legalization_ - Some activists in the drug reform movement 
call themselves 'legalizers,' implying they support freer 
distribution of currently illegal drugs. Legalization of drugs, 
however, could take many forms. The libertarian approach to 
legalization advocates free-market distribution of all drugs, 
including cocaine, heroin, and marijuana. This is perhaps the 
most common popular conception of legalization, yet most 
'legalizers' favor a more controlled distribution. Some legalizers 
advocate that hard drugs be made legal like alcohol and tobacco, 
which implies licensing and taxation, controls on advertising and 
places of use, and a prohibition of sales to minors. Others 
believe marijuana-and not cocaine, heroin, LSD, and other 
'hard' drugs-be made legal. Finally, others advocate a regulated 
distribution of drugs through public health facilities, whereby 
drugs would be legal but monitored, and addicts would have 
regular contact with public health professionals.'

 -- NASRO Issue Brief, Spring 1995 vol. 1, no.1,
    'Rethinking the War on Drugs and Crime: New Approaches 
      to Local Policy'.
    http://www.dscc.org/cwa/report.html



7. Full Legalization / the 'Supermarket' model
 
    'Imagine... that Congress passed a law granting the freedom 
of drug consumption and even production and distribution the 
same legal protections as the rights of freedom of speech, press, 
religion and assembly. And imagine that 'supermarkets' existed 
all around the country in which drugs of every variety could be 
purchased at prices reflecting nothing more than retailers' costs 
plus reasonable profit margins and sales taxes. This is, of 
course, the nightmare scenario portrayed by the opponents of 
legalization-even if it is not the policy favored by virtually any of 
those identified as proponents of legalization apart from the most 
hardcore libertarians... 
    'The great advantage of this model is that it eliminates 
virtually all of the direct and indirect costs of drug prohibition: 
the many billions of dollars spent each year on arresting, 
prosecuting and incarcerating hundreds of thousands of 
Americans, the diversion of scarce governmental resources from 
dealing with other, more immediately harmful, criminal 
activities, the tens of billions earned each year by organized and 
unorganized criminals, much of the violence, corruption and 
other criminal activity associated with the illicit drug markets, the 
distortion of economic incentives for inner city residents, the 
severe problems posed by adulterated and otherwise unregulated 
drugs, the inadequate prescription of drugs for the treatment of 
pain, the abundant infringements on Americans' civil liberties, 
and all the other costs detailed in the extant literature on drug 
prohibition and legalization.  
    'The great disadvantage of the 'supermarket' model is its 
invitation to substantial increases in both the amount and the 
diversity of psychoactive drug consumption. What needs to be 
determined as best as possible are the magnitude and nature of 
that increase as well as its consequences. Among the more 
explicit assumptions of the legalization analysis is that the vast 
majority of Americans do not need drug prohibition laws to 
prevent them from becoming drug abusers. Prohibitionists 
typically assume, by contrast, that most Americans, and at the 
very least a substantial minority, do in fact need such laws-that 
but for drug prohibition, tens of millions more Americans would 
surely become drug abusers.'

 -- Ethan A. Nadelmann, 
    'Thinking seriously about alternatives to the drug 
      prohibition',
    _Daedalus_ v.123:3, 
    http://www.calyx.com/~mariolap/debate/ethan1.html


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Appendix A: Forfeiture and Mandatory Minimums

The War on Drugs has required dehumanizing drug-users and 
drug-sellers, and that has led to the 'drug exception to 
the Bill of Rights'.  Two of these excesses permitted in the name 
of 'getting tough on drugs' are the forfeiture laws and the 
mandatory minimum laws.  Modifying them to a civilized 
level would not require the substantial change in policy that 
many of the previously mentioned ideas would; for that reason, 
they are presented separately.


I. Forfeiture

    'It's a strange twist of justice in the land of freedom. A law 
designed to give cops the right to confiscate and keep the 
luxurious possessions of major drug dealers mostly ensnares the 
modest homes, cars and cash of ordinary, law-abiding people. 
They step off a plane or answer their front door and suddenly 
lose everything they've worked for. They are not arrested or 
tried for any crime. But there is punishment, and it's severe....
    'In their zeal to curb drugs and sometimes to fill their coffers 
with the proceeds of what they take, local cops, federal agents 
and the courts have curbed innocent Americans' civil rights. 
From Maine to Hawaii, people who are never charged with a 
crime have had cars, boats, money and homes taken away.
    'In fact, 80 percent of the people who lost property to the 
federal government were never charged. And most of the seized 
items weren't the luxurious playthings of drug barons, but 
modest homes and simple cars and hard-earned savings of 
ordinary people. 
    'But those goods generated $2 billion for the police 
departments that took them.
    'The owners' only crime in many of these cases: They 
'looked' like drug dealers. They were black, Hispanic or 
flashily dressed... 
    'Says Eric Sterling, who helped write the law a decade ago as 
a lawyer on a congressional committee: 'The innocent-until-
proven guilty concept is gone out the window.'
    '_The Law: Guilt Doesn't Matter_
    'Rooted in English common law, forfeiture has surfaced just 
twice in the United States since Colonial times.
    'In 1862, Congress permitted the president to seize estates of 
Confederate soldiers. Then, in 1970, it resurrected forfeiture for 
the civil war on drugs with the passage of racketeering laws that 
targeted the assets of convicted criminals.
    'In 1984, however, the nature of the law was radically 
changed to allow the government to take possessions with- out 
first charging, let alone convicting, the owner. That was done in 
an effort to make it easier to strike at the heart of the major drug 
dealers...
    'And there was a bonus in the law.  The proceeds would flow 
back to law enforcement to finance more investigations. It was 
to be the ultimate poetic justice, with criminals financing their 
own undoing. 
    'But eliminating the necessity of charging or proving a crime 
has moved most of the action to civil court, where the 
government accuses the item - not the owner - of being tainted 
by crime.
    'This oddity has court dockets looking like purchase orders: 
United States of America vs. 9.6 acres of land and lake; U.S. 
vs. 667 bottles of wine.  But it's more than just a labeling 
change. Because money and property are at stake instead of life 
and liberty, the constitutional safeguards in criminal proceedings 
do not apply.
    'The result is that 'jury trials can be refused; illegal searches 
condoned; rules of evidence ignored,' says Louisville, Ky., 
defense lawyer Donald Heavrin. The 'frenzied quest for cash,' 
he says, is 'destroying the judicial system.'

 -- Andrew Schneider & Mary Pat Flaherty,
    _Presumed Guilty: The Law's Victims In The War On 
      Drugs_,
    Pittsburgh (PA) Press, August 11, 1991
    http://www.fear.org/pittpres.html

II. Mandatory Minimums

    'In 1986, Congress passed laws that impose mandatory 
sentences for drug and firearm offenses.  These sentences 
require an offender to serve a predetermined number of years in 
prison based solely on the weight of a drug or the presence of a 
firearm. The offender is not eligible for parole and must serve 
the full term of his or her sentence. Many states have adopted 
similar laws....
    _What is wrong with Mandatory Minimum Sentencing?_
    [1] These laws cause prison overcrowding.
    -In 1990, the number of people sent to state and federal 
prisons for drug offenses exceeded the number of offenders sent 
to prison for violent crimes... In fact, sentence lengths for first 
time, nonviolent drug offenses often exceed sentence lengths for 
violent offenders. 
    -With 1.3 million Americans behind bars, the U.S. rate of 
incarceration is 519 per 100,000 people.  The U.S. rate has 
increased by 22 percent since 1989, and is generally 5-8 times 
the rate of most industrialized nations...
    -Drug offenders currently make up 62 percent of the federal 
inmate population, up from 22 percent in 1980. 
    -In 1990, more than half of the federal inmates serving 
mandatory minimum sentences were first offenders...
    [2] They tear apart families.
    *Young men and women locked up for 5, 10, 15, 20 years 
and more, leave behind children with one caretaker and in some 
cases, no caretaker.
    *According to the Governor of Kansas, one-third of today's 
inmates are children of offenders. In the next decade one half of 
all inmates will be children of inmates. Mandatory minimums are 
sowing the seeds of the next generation's prison population.
    *Inmates with elderly parents may not get out in time to see 
their parents alive.
    *Others are incarcerated so far from home that their families 
can rarely afford to travel the distance to visit them...
    [3] They cost a lot of money...
    *The department of Justice budget has grown 162 percent 
since the enactment of mandatory minimums in 1987, compared 
to the Department of Education of only 77 percent.(Bureau of 
Justice Statistics, 1995)...
    *States spend more of their budgets on justice programs 
(6.4%) than on housing and the
enviroment (3.8%)...
    *Each day, American taxpayers are spending $3.4 million to 
guard, clothe, feed, and house the 60,140 drug law violators in 
federal prison.
    *Annually, American taxpayers spend $1.24 billion to keep 
drug offenders in federal prison. 

 -- Families Against Mandatory Minimums (FAMM)
     http://www.famm.org/



Appendix B: Industrial Hemp and Medical Marijuana

A sign of the failure of current drug policy is that the economic 
opportunities of non-intoxicating industrial hemp and the 
medical potential of marijuana have so far been neglected.  
Most opposition to these uses of marijuana seem to be based on 
fears of their being part of a conspiracy to legalize marijuana in a 
wider sense.  It may be necessary, then, to discuss the non-
recreational issues of marijuana separately from recreational 
ones, if only for the sake of the resources that could be 
conserved and the suffering that could be alleviated.


I. Industrial Hemp

     'Growing hemp for fibre makes sound economic and  
environmental sense. It is superior to all other fibres, lasts  
longer, and requires little or no chemical treatment. 
    'Growing hemp for fuel makes sound economic and  
environmental sense. Methanol bio-gas can run vehicles, 
provide  cooking and heating fuel. Henry Ford proved its 
viability with his  all-Hemp car of 1940 which ran on hemp bio-
gas, and had a hemp  plastic chassis (stronger than steel) - the 
hemp products coming  from his own plantations. 
    'Growing hemp for pulp paper makes sound economic and  
environmental sense. It takes 4 times more timber to produce  
the same quantity of pulp for paper than it does using hemp. 
Hemp  is a renewable resource and can be grown, harvested and 
processed  without the need for environmentally-damaging 
chemicals. Rain  forests can be preserved for generations to 
come rather than be  sacrificed as pulp for tabloid reading. Hemp 
for pulp and paper  today means forests for our childrens 
childrens children. 
    'Growing hemp for food makes sound economic and  
nutritional sense. Hemp seed has a higher percentage of useable  
protein than soya beans, sunflower and sesame. Richer in 
Essential  Fatty Acids than flax, evening primrose or any other 
seed oil, it is  being called 'Nature's most perfectly balanced 
oil'. Hemp seed oil  is beneficial for cholestoral reduction and 
conditions the arteries  and heart muscles.' 

 -- QDC Solutions -- Agroforestry
    http://www.om.com.au/qdc/forest/hemp.html


    'Cannabis is the most durable of the hemp plants, and it 
produces the toughest cloth, called `canvass.'  (Canvass was 
widely used as sails in the early shipping industry, as it was the 
only cloth which would not rot on contact with sea  spray.)...
    'The pulp is used as fuel, and to make paper.  The seed is 
suitable for both human and animal foods.  The oil from the seed 
can be used in as a base for paints and varnishes....
    'Today in the U.S., hemp (meaning the roots, stalk, and 
stems of the cannabis plant) is legal to possess.  No one can 
arrest you for wearing a hemp shirt, or using hemp paper.  
Marijuana (The flowers, buds, or leaves of the cannabis plant) is 
not legal to possess, and there are stiff fines and possible jail 
terms for having any marijuana in your possession.  The seeds 
are legal to possess and eat, but only if they are sterilized (will 
not grow to maturity.)
    'Since it is not possible to grow the hemp plant without being 
in possession of marijuana, the United States does not produce 
any industrial hemp products, and must import them or, more 
often, substitute others.'

 -- alt.hemp Frequently Asked Questions,
    http://www.paranoia.com/drugs/marijuana/hemp/
                                         FAQ-alt.hemp



II. Medical Marijuana

    'In the 100 years prior to marijuana prohibition, more than 
100 European and American medical journal stories were 
published regarding the therapeutic use of the drug known as 
cannabis indica, now known as marijuana.
    'Today, the 5000 year history of medical marijuana has been 
revisited by thousands of medical patients and by doctors such 
as Lester Grinspoon and Tod Mikuriya.
    'In 1988, DEA Administrative Law Judge Francis L. Young 
stated that marijuana is one of the safest therapeutically active 
substances known to man and that marijuana in it's natural form 
fulfilled the legal requirement of currently accepted medical use 
in the United States. (Docket 86-22) 
    'The DEA refused to accept the findings of this court and 
continues to list marijuana as a schedule one controlled 
substance, meaning the use of marijuana is strictly forbidden. 
Instead, the DEA encourages the use of dronabinol (Marinol) 
which has has only minor levels of success in some patients. 
Dronabinol is a synthetic form of THC, the therapeutically active 
substance in marijuana. 
  'Marijuana has been proven useful for in the treatment of:
       Glaucoma
              Relieves intraocular pressure
       Cancer chemotherapy 
              Relieves nausea
              Stimulates appetite
              Improves attitude
       AIDS 
              Reduces or eliminates 'wasting syndrome'
       Multiple Sclerosis 
              Relieves muscular spasms
       Post Traumatic Stress Syndrome 
              Helps reduce stress and anxiety in many war veterans
       Menstrual discomfort and PMS relief
       Chronic Fatigue Stress Syndrome aka CFIDS'

 -- Americans for Compassionate Use
    http://www.acu.org/~acu/


    'Physicians have both a right and a duty to be skeptical about 
therapeutic claims for any substance, but only after putting aside 
fears and doubts connected with the stigma of illicit nonmedical 
drug use. Advocates of medical use of marihuana are sometimes 
charged with using medicine as a wedge to open a way for 
'recreational' use. The accusation is false as applied to its target, 
but expresses in a distorted form a truth about some opponents 
of medical marihuana; they will not admit that it can be a safe 
and effective medicine largely because they are stubbornly 
committed to exaggerating its dangers when used for nonmedical 
purposes. 
    'We are not asking readers for immediate agreement with our 
affirmation that marihuana is medically useful, but we hope they 
will do more to encourage open and legal exploration of its 
potential. The ostensible indifference of physicians should no 
longer be used as a justification for keeping this medicine in the 
shadows.'

 -- Lester Grinspoon, MD, James B. Bakalar, JD,
    'Marijuana as Medicine: a Plea for Reconsideration', 
    1876 _Journal of the America Medical Association_,
    June 21, 1995 -- Vol. 273, No. 23,
    http://www.calyx.com/~olsen/MEDICAL/lester.html

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