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- Date: Thu, 22 Jul 1993 14:54:36 -0700 (PDT)
- From: Leora Lawton <LLAWTON@USCVM.BITNET>
- Subject: lester grinspoon
- Sender: Drug Abuse Education Information and Research <DRUGABUS@UMAB.BITNET>
- Message-id: <01H0UI8N70HU8WZ4X1@YMIR.CLAREMONT.EDU>
-
- From today's local [Boulder] paper, by Linda Cornett, w/o permission:
-
- Tsk. Those foolish kids, throwing their lives away on that dangerous
- drug marijuana. Maybe they would pay attention to another voice, one
- based on scientific research, psychiatrist Lester Grinspoon reasoned.
-
- Fired with his mission, Grinspoon embarked on a three-year
- investigation of cannabis, emerging with a changed perspective. "I
- came to understand that I had been brainwashed like the rest of the
- country," said Grinspoon, who is now on the staff of the Harvard
- Medical School.
-
- Grinspoon wrote a widely discussed book in 1971 about the
- conversion of his thinking and in May his latest book, "Marihuana, The
- Forbidden Medicine," was released by Yale University Press.
-
- [stuff about his speech and a free, public conference in Denver this
- weekend deleted]
-
- Although the (colorado) state law allows cannabis to be used for
- medical reasons, federal law prohibits its sale in any form but a
- derivative capsule. It is prescribed to reduce the nausea of cancer
- paitents undergoing chemotherapy, to reduce the nausea of AIDS
- patients and to relieve the symptoms of glaucoma.
-
- Although there is little medical use of marijuana in Colorado, that is
- because other, more effective drugs are available and not because
- regualtions make the drug unavailable, said Donn Fox, spokesman for
- the Drug Enforcement Administration office in Denver.
-
- The DEA has completed a three-year study on whether to loosen
- restrictions on cannabis, Fox said, and found no support from any
- "bona fide" medical association in the U.S.
-
- "The argument could be made that groups such as NORML are using
- the medicinial marijuana issue in an attempt to legitimize marijuana in
- our society," Fox said.
-
- Grinspoon responds that cannabis should be legitimized, but that
- takes nothing from its medical value. If the pill derivative is less
- effective than other drugs, he said, that is because it works better as a
- cigarette than a pill.
-
- Now, he said, he is convinced the only rational approach is to treat
- marijuana like alcohol.
-
- "If I had to make a choice, I would far rather have someone use
- marijuana than alcohol," Grinspoon said. "It's less toxic physically and
- its behaviorial toxicity is vastly different--people don't get aggressive
- and abusive when they use marijuana.
-
- "There is no such thing as a harmless drug," Grinspoon said, "but
- marijuana is far less harmful than either alcohol or tobacco. I believed
- rather naively that once people understood that, it would be legalized
- within 10 years. Marijuana doesn't make its users behave irrationally,
- but it certrainly makes non-users behavior irrationally." [great line!]
-
- Grinspoon said he does not believe marijuana is addictive, although it
- is more harmful to the lungs than tobacco smoke. Studies of users,
- however, have shown that unlike cigarette smokers, they only smoke
- until high and then stop, he said.
-
- Attitudes are changing, Grinspoon said. Massachusetts last year
- became the 35th state to legalize the medical use of marijuana.
- Oregon reduced penalties for marijuana use to a fine in 1973. In the
- Netherlands, marijuana is easily available and seldom penalized,
- Grinspoon said.
-
- He believes the U.S. government will eventually decriminalize the
- plant.
-