Medical Marijuana Helps Seriously Ill

SmokeDog420

New Member
I am an enrolled, card-carrying, President Bush- and
war-in-Iraq-supporting conservative. You might expect me -- a lawyer,
former prosecutor and law chairman of the Bronx County chapter of the
state Conservative Party -- to oppose legislation allowing the
medicinal use of marijuana.

You would be wrong. Many conservatives like me strongly support the
medicinal use of marijuana, mostly because we have seen firsthand how
medical marijuana can help desperately ill people.

My brother-in-law, John Holmberg, was a decent, hardworking man who
was making plans for his future. He was working for the Postal Service
by day and studying to become an engineer at night when his dreams and
his life were cut short at the age of 40, in March 2002, after a
two-year struggle with pancreatic cancer.

Like many who undergo chemotherapy, John endured terrible nausea,
pain, loss of appetite and weight loss. He was suffering, both from
his illness and from the treatments his doctors prescribed. Marijuana
helped to ease that suffering. It relieved his pain and nausea, giving
him back his appetite and stopping his weight loss.

Medical marijuana gave John more than two years of life, and it made
that time less painful. It worked when legal prescription medications
did not.

Yet, the laws of New York treat patients like my brother-in-law as
criminals.

Seeing how medical marijuana helped John led me to support New York's
medical marijuana legislation, sponsored by Assembly Health Committee
Chair Richard Gottfried, a Manhattan Democrat, and 42 other Assembly
members, including eight Republicans.

It is the only rational, humane thing to do.

Ten states have laws like the Gottfried bill that protect medical
marijuana patients. These laws have been implemented with few problems.

The General Accounting Office, the investigative arm of Congress,
reviewed four of those states' laws in 2002, including interviews with
officials in 37 law-enforcement agencies. The majority of these
officials reported "little impact on their law enforcement
activities."

For many years, doctors have been allowed to prescribe such drugs as
morphine, cocaine and methamphetamine, which are much more addictive
and dangerous than marijuana. Physicians are in the best position to
know whether medical marijuana would help a patient; they should be
allowed to make that decision legally.

Some in my party strongly oppose the legalization of medical
marijuana. One argument they advance is that the evidence in favor of
medical marijuana is "anecdotal."

These folks are misinformed.

Medical organizations across the country support medical marijuana
laws. Last year, the New York State Association of County Health
Officials, all of whom are physicians, joined them, stating:
"Marijuana has proven to be effective in the treatment of people with
HIV/AIDS, multiple sclerosis, cancer and those suffering from severe
pain or nausea."

We have an opportunity to let humanity and justice guide us, to stop
treating users of medical marijuana as criminals, and to honor John
and others like him who need our help as they seek a longer, less
painful life.

I ask all New Yorkers of every political persuasion to join me and to
support New York's medical marijuana bill.

John H. Wilson is a Bronx attorney.

Pubdate: Wed, 24 Mar 2004
Source: Times Union (Albany, NY)
Webpage:
https://www.timesunion.com/AspStories/story.asp?storyID=231646&category=OPINION&newsdate=3/24/2004
Copyright: 2004 Capital Newspapers Division of The Hearst Corporation
Contact: tuletters@timesunion.com
Website: Home
 
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