"Illegal drugs have condemned thousands to lives of poverty, crime, and despair. That is no reason to compound the suffering of the seriously ill."
http://www.boston.com/news/globe/editorial_opinion/editorials/articles/2004/11/30/marijuana_paranoia/ GLOBE EDITORIAL
Marijuana paranoia
November 30, 2004
SURELY THE federal government has better things to do than harass desperately ill people seeking relief under their states' medical marijuana laws. A reasoned decision by the US Supreme Court, which yesterday heard arguments involving California's therapeutic marijuana law, would help to regulate and monitor these programs rather than driving them underground.
Unfortunately, national and local antidrug campaigns have discouraged reasoned thinking about most proposals involving drugs. The government's contention that controlled medical use of marijuana would "swell the illicit drug market" is a good example. Morphine, far more dangerous than marijuana, has been prescribed by doctors for years with no corresponding surge in its availability on the street.
Eleven states from California to Montana have passed laws allowing marijuana to be prescribed for diseases including cancer, AIDS, and glaucoma. The active ingredient in marijuana has been shown to relieve symtoms caused by these diseases and their treatment by reducing nausea and vomiting and improving appetite.......