Marijuana Is Here To Stay.

    Lester Grinspoon MD

    Professor Grinspoon provided this article:
    “in support of CLEAR”.

    In 1967, because of my concern about the rapidly growing use of the dangerous drug marijuana, I began my studies of the scientific and medical literature with the goal of providing a reasonably objective summary of the data which underlay its prohibition.  Much to my surprise, I found no credible scientific basis for the justification of the prohibition.  The assertion that it is a very toxic drug is based on old and new myths.  In fact, one of the many exceptional features of this drug is its remarkably limited toxicity.  Compared to aspirin, which people are free to purchase and use without the advice or prescription of a physician, cannabis is much safer: there are well over 1000 deaths annually from aspirin in the United States alone, whereas there has never been a death anywhere from marijuana.  In fact, when cannabis regains its place in the US Pharmacopeia, a status it lost after the passage of the Marijuana Tax Act of 1937, it will be seen as one of the safest drugs in that compendium.  Moreover, it will eventually be hailed as a “wonder drug” just as penicillin was in the 1940s.  Penicillin achieved this reputation because it was remarkably non-toxic, it was, once it was produced on an economy of scale, quite inexpensive, and it was effective in the treatment of a variety of infectious diseases.  Similarly, cannabis is exceptionally safe, and once freed of the prohibition tariff, will be significantly less expensive than the conventional drugs it replaces while its already impressive medical versatility continues to expand.

    Given these characteristics, it should come as no surprise that its use as a medicine is growing exponentially or that individual states have established legislation which makes it possible for patients suffering from a variety of disorders to use the drug legally with a recommendation from a physician. Unfortunately, because each state arrogates the right to define which symptoms and syndromes may be lawfully treated with cannabis, many  patients with legitimate claims to the therapeutic usefulness of this plant must continue to use it illegally and therefore endure the extra layer of anxiety imposed by its illegality.  California and Colorado are the two states in which the largest number of patients for whom it would be medically useful have the freedom to access it legally.  New Jersey is the most restrictive, and I would guess that only a small fraction of the pool of patients who would find marijuana to be as or more useful than the invariably more toxic conventional drugs it will displace will be allowed legal access to it.  The framers of the New Jersey legislation may fear what they see as chaos in the distribution of medical marijuana in California and Colorado, a fear born of their concern that the more liberal parameters of medical use  adopted in these states have allowed its access to many people who use it for other than strictly medicinal reasons.  If this is correct, it is consistent with my view that it will be impossible to realize the full potential of this plant as a medicine, not to speak of the other ways it is useful, in the setting of this destructive prohibition.

    Marijuana is here to stay; there can no longer be any doubt that it is not just another transient drug fad.  Like alcohol, it has become a part of our culture, a culture which is now trying to find an appropriate social, legal and medical accommodation.  We have finally come to realize, after arresting over 21 million marijuana users since the 1960s, most of them young and 90% for mere possession, that “making war” against cannabis doesn’t work anymore now than it did for alcohol during the days of the Volstead Act.  Many people are expressing their impatience with the federal government’s intransigence as it  obdurately maintains its position that ” marijuana is not a medicine”.  Thirteen states have now decriminalized marijuana.  And, beginning with California in 1996, another 14 states and the District of Columbia have followed suit in allowing patients legal access to marijuana, and  others are in the process of enactlng similar legislation.  These states are inadvertently constructing a large social experiment in how best to deal with the reinvention of the “cannabis as medicine” phenomenon, while at the same time sending a powerful message to the federal government.  Each of these state actions has taken a slice out of the extraordinary popular delusion known as cannabinophobia.

    Perhaps in part because so many Americans have discovered for themselves that marihuana is both relatively benign and remarkably useful, moral consensus about the evil of cannabis is becoming uncertain and shallow. The authorities pretend that eliminating cannabis traffic is like eliminating slavery or piracy, or eradicating smallpox or malaria. The official view is that everything possible has to be done to prevent everyone from ever using marihuana, even as a medicine. But there is also an informal lore of marihuana use that is far more tolerant. Many of the millions of cannabis users in this country not only disobey the drug laws but feel a principled lack of respect for them. They do not conceal their bitter resentment of laws that render them criminals. They believe that many people have been deceived by their government, and they have come to doubt that the “authorities” understand much about either the deleterious or the useful properties of the drug. This undercurrent of ambivalence and resistance in public attitudes towards marihuana laws leaves room for the possibility of change, especially since the costs of prohibition are all so high and rising.

    It is also clear that the realities of human need are incompatible with the demand for a legally enforceable distinction between medicine and all other uses of cannabis. Marihuana simply does not conform to the conceptual boundaries established by twentieth-century institutions.  It is truly a sui generis substance; is there another non-toxic drug which is capable of heightening many pleasures, has a large and growing number of  medical uses and has the potential to enhance some individual capacities? The only workable way of realizing the full potential of this remarkable substance, including its full medical potential, is to free it from the present dual set of regulations – those that control prescription drugs in general and the special criminal laws that control psychoactive substances. These mutually reinforcing laws establish a set of social categories that strangle its uniquely multifaceted potential. The only way out is to cut the knot by giving marihuana the same status as alcohol – legalizing it for adults for all uses and removing it entirely from the medical and criminal control systems.

    Lester Grinspoon M.D. is Associate Professor of Psychiatry, emeritus, at Harvard Medical School
    and the author of Marihuana Reconsidered and Marijuana, the Forbidden Medicine.
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    • 1323

      Brilliant.

    • Anonymous

      Excellent. Some sense on the issue for a change.

    • Dan Ford

      A splendid article by Professor Grinspoon. I do hope Mary Brett can read it, she really need to be educated.

    • ss

      thank you so much. the part about asprin was mind blowing.

    • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=553224506 Doc Jupiter

      Excellent, Lester da MAN!!

    • http://www.facebook.com/people/Jeff-Zahnow/100001607886869 Jeff Zahnow

      the truth will prevail

    • http://www.facebook.com/jenni.shasteen Jenni Shasteen

      No one should be in jail for this medicine…I’m sick of it..It’s so sad & ruins peoples lives when nothing could get anymore better for you then cannabis. Legalize it..save people, save money.

    • http://www.facebook.com/people/Barbi-Nielssen/1573405104 Barbi Nielssen

      BRAVO!!!
       

    • Ricky

       Great Article! This type of content needs to be published wherever possible.

    • Marleydog1324

       I would like the article a whole lot more if they slept marijuana right. C’mon guys this is a NORML site we are supposed to send a different message. 

    • Anonymous

      What are you talking about? Every instance of the word is spelled exactly as you’ve “slept” it. Marihuana and Mariguana are also accepted spellings of the word. Perhaps you meant it should be “slept” c-a-n-n-a-b-i-s?

    • Renatocpadilha

      I would say more. Save the World 

    • Girrrar

      Being a norml and everyday citizen  will reinforce marijuana’s safety. When this fails violence will be needed.

    • Anonymous

      As laudable as the attempt at reducing the consumption of any recreational or addictive substance might be, by attempting to reduce temptation, prohibitionists also remove choice and therefore eliminate the possibility of the individual choosing between right and wrong. Instead, the ‘right’ choice is imposed, thus replacing personal (and civic) virtue with the impossible-to-enforce ‘virtue by fiat’. Granted, certain drugs, or even particular sports and sexual practices, may have the potential to cause self-harm, but to curtail a persons unalienable rights, including the right to compromise one’s own health, is to embark on an un-ending and descending spiral towards the assured destruction of our economy and cherished, civic institutions. 
      Prohibitionists often express the belief that the resulting suffering and mayhem that their policy engenders is in no way connected to the basic and erroneous mechanism being used, but that they simply haven’t been granted sufficient governmental powers, i.e., the removal of even more of our basic individual rights and freedoms for these sadistic, sociopathic perverts to do their work successfully. 

      It’s quite possible, that many of the early Prohibitionists did not intend to kill hundreds of thousands worldwide or put 1 in every 32 Americans under supervision of the correctional system. Nevertheless, it may now be reasonable to claim, that our Latter-Day Sadomoralist Prison-for-Profit Prohibitionists don’t care. They don’t care that, historically, the prohibition of any mind altering substance has never resulted in anything else but mayhem and chaos. They don’t care that America has the highest percentage of it’s citizens incarcerated of any country in the history of the planet. And they don’t care about spawning far worse conditions than those they claim to be alleviating. These despotic imbeciles are actually quite happy to create as much mayhem as possible, after all, it’s what fills their prisons and gets them elected. Which is why it’s no surprise, that when asked if they support torture, prohibitionist, GOP Presidential candidates rush to raise their hands. http://www.drugwarrant.com/2011/05/torture-and-drug-policy/

      Here’s what the UK Economist Magazine thinks of us: “Never in the civilised world have so many been locked up for so little”  http://www.economist.com/node/16636027

    • LTrem

       Good articles Mr. Grinspoon. I’ve seen you in some documentary and read many article you wrote… Thank you for your time and your determination for the subject. Keep doing it!

    • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100000001256346 Jack Story

      What if you have quit smoking and don’t want to start again.  Does that mean you will have to change your brownie receipe? 

    • http://www.facebook.com/jharder1 James Harder

      It’s only a matter of time

    • Ste_Sawyer

      Jesus, and this isn’t even NORML

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