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Hawaii: Hawaii's Vanishing Medical Marijuana Gap

Ronald Fraser PhD

Hawaii Reporter

Wednesday 10 May 2006

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When there is a big gap between the views of ordinary Americans on a
public issue and the voting record of their elected representatives in
Congress on that issue, something is wrong. In the national debate over
the use of marijuana for medical purposes, the people and their
representatives in Congress seem to be living on different planets. In
Hawaii, however, the gap has been closed.

Poll after poll shows Americans, by a huge majority, want their doctors,
not lawmakers, to decide whether or not marijuana should be used as a
medicine. Today, however, federal laws prohibit physicians from
prescribing marijuana for pain relief even where state and local laws
say it is OK to do so. This has not always been the case.

"For most of American history, growing and using marijuana was legal
under both federal law and the laws of individual states," according to
a recent report by the Congressional Research Service, an arm of the
U.S. Congress. The report goes to say, "From 1850 to the early 1940s
cannabis was included in the U. S. Pharmacopoeia as a recognized
medicinal. [But] its decline in medicine was hastened by the development
of aspirin, morphine, and other opium-derived drugs, all of which helped
to replace marijuana in the treatment of pain."

The Polls.

In 1999 a Gallup poll asked, "Suppose that on election day this year you
could vote on key issues as well as candidates. Please tell me, would
you vote for or against making marijuana legally available for doctors
to prescribe in order to reduce pain and suffering?" Response: 73% of
the American people said they would vote for making marijuana legally
available under those conditions.

In both 2003 and 2005 Gallup polls asked, "Would you favor or oppose
making marijuana legally available for doctors to prescribe in order to
reduce pain and suffering?" In 2003, 75% and in 2005, 78% of the people
said they would favor giving doctors the legal right to decide when
marijuana should be prescribed to ease suffering.

The National Gap.

Apparently Members of Congress don't read the polls these days, nor do
they care much about state laws. In 12 states -- Alaska, Arizona,
California, Colorado, Hawaii, Maine, Montana, Nevada, Oregon, Rhode
Island, Vermont and Washington -- laws already give doctors the power to
decide whether or not to use marijuana to treat patients in pain.

In the U.S. House of Representatives on May 4, 2005, Rep. Barney Frank,
(D-MA) introduced H.R. 2087, a bill "to provide for the medical use of
marijuana in accordance with the laws of the various states," and to
prohibit the federal government from stopping "an individual from
obtaining and using marijuana from a prescription or recommendation by a
physician for medical use." On May 13th the bill was referred to the
Committee on Energy and Commerce -- where it is stuck.

Since a federal bill allowing states to regulate the medical use of
marijuana can't make it to the House floor for an up or down vote, an
alternative strategy is to attach a medical marijuana amendment to a
spending bill that will reach the House floor. On June 15, 2005, Rep.
Maurice D. Hinchey (D-NY) did just that and offered Amendment 272 to
H.R. 2862. The amendment would have prohibited federal agencies from
preventing the implementation of state laws that authorize the use of
medical marijuana. The amendment was rejected on a 264 to 161 vote.

In other words, while 78% of the American people favor letting doctors
(and states) decide this issue, only 38% of the House members favored a
law supporting that policy. Nationally, that's a whopping 40% medical
marijuana gap separating what the American people want and what their
hard-of-hearing elected representatives deliver.

Hawaii’s Vanishing Gap.

With both House members from Hawaii, Congressmen Neil Abercrombie and Ed
Case, both Democrats, voting in favor of Amendment 272, the state's
lawmakers have demonstrated a readiness to close the gap separating
public opinion and public policy.

Nationally the wide gap remains, with all congressmen from South
Carolina, Kansas, Tennessee, Kentucky, Mississippi, Nebraska and
Oklahoma voting against the amendment.

American democracy calls on lawmakers to be responsive to the common
sense wisdom of ordinary citizens. Instead, some members of Congress are
standing in the way of existing state laws and the majority of Americans
who want their physicians, not politicians, to decide if marijuana
should be used to ease suffering in sick patients.

If these officials don’t improve their hearing, voters might consider
replacing them this coming November with people who have better
listening skills.

Ronald Fraser, Ph.D., writes on public policy issues for the DKT Liberty
Project, a Washington-based civil liberties organization. Write him at:
mailto:fraserr@erols.com

HawaiiReporter.com reports the real news, and prints all editorials
submitted, even if they do not represent the viewpoint of the editors,
as long as they are written clearly. Send editorials to
mailto:Malia@HawaiiReporter.com
http://www.hawaiireporter.com/story.aspx?2c935b49-7044-4153-ac6a-553be53b7641

 

 

 

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