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- From: carlolsen@dsmnet.com (Carl E. Olsen)
- Newsgroups: alt.hemp,alt.drugs,talk.politics.drugs
- Subject: Indian Hemp Drugs Commission
- Date: Fri, 21 Oct 1994 22:57:16
- Message-ID: <carlolsen.633.0016F500@dsmnet.com>
-
- NATIONAL ORGANIZATION FOR THE REFORM OF MARIJUANA LAWS (NORML)
- 1001 CONNECTICUT AVENUE NW * SUITE 1010 * WASHINGTON, D.C. 20036
- PHONE 202-483-5500 * FAX 202-483-0057 * E-MAIL NATLNORML@AOL.COM
-
- * * * NEWS RELEASE * * *
-
- First Large-Scale Marijuana Commission Report
- Turns 100 Years Old
- CONTACT:
- Tod Mikuriya, M.D., marijuana researcher/historian......................
- ......510-843-0279
- Matthew Atha, M.Sc., British drug abuse research consultant.............
- 011-44-942-522-946
- Mike Goodman, Release (British anti-prohibition organization) director..
- 011-44-71-729-5255
- Lester Grinspoon, M.D., Harvard Medical School professor................
- ......617-277-3621
- Eric Sterling, Criminal Justice Policy Foundation president.............
- ......202-835-9075
-
- November 1, 1994, marks the 100th anniversary of the Report of the Indian
- Hemp Drugs Commission (1893-94). This 3,281-page British
- government-commissioned report on marijuana consumption in India was the
- first large-scale study of the marijuana phenomenon. The commission's
- purpose was to discover the actual effects of marijuana consumption on
- individuals and society and to determine the most appropriate governmental
- response. (Marijuana was legal at the time.)
- The study was perhaps the most extensive marijuana fact-finding mission
- to date. Evidence was collected from more than 1,000 witnesses, including
- medical officers, missionaries, and cultivators. The study was unique in
- another regard as a pre-prohibition study, the effects of the drug were not
- confounded by the subjects' involvement with a criminal subculture.
- The conclusions in no way justify the current War Against Marijuana
- Consumers. The report's conclusions included the following:
- * Physical, Mental, and Moral Effects -- "[T]he moderate use of these
- drugs is the rule, and ... excessive use is comparatively exceptional. The
- moderate use produces practically no ill effects. In all but the most
- exceptional cases, the injury from habitual moderate use is not appreciable.
- The excessive use may certainly be accepted as very injurious, though it must
- be admitted that in many excessive consumers the injury is not dearly marked."
- [Volume I, page 264, emphasis added.] * Societal Effects -- "[E]ven the
- excessive consumer of hemp drugs is ordinarily inoffensive. ... [F]or all
- practical purposes it may be laid down that there is little or no connection
- between the use of hemp drugs and crime. The injury done by the excessive use
- is ... confined almost exclusively to the consumer himself; the effect on
- society is rarely appreciable. ... [Facts] combine to show most clearly how
- little injury society has hitherto sustained from hemp drugs." [Volume I, page
- 264,emphasis added.] * Policy Recommendations -- "Total prohibition ... is
- neither necessary nor expedient. ... The policy advocated is one of control
- and restriction, aimed at suppressing the excessive use and restraining the
- moderate use within due limits." To these ends, the commission recommended
- taxationand licensing.
-
- Interestingly, the commission also warned of the possibility that
- prohibition may lead to the consumption of harder drugs, specifically by
- "driving the consumers to have recourse to other stimulants or narcotics
- which may be more deleterious." [Volume I, page 360, emphasis added.]
- Sadly, this prediction has come true, as Marijuana Prohibition has
- indeed increased hard drug abuse.
-
- Significance of the Anniversary PAGE 2 OF 2
-
- "The centennial of the Indian Hemp Drugs Commission Report is an occasion
- to seriously re-examine contemporary marijuana policy," explains Dr. Tod
- Mikuriya* "The conclusions reached predate by 100 years what we now consider
- to be model harm-reduction policies."
- Indeed, every major commission study of the past 100 years has also made
- recommendations against the complete prohibition of marijuana. Examples
- include: The Panama Canal Zone Military Investigations (1916-1929); Mayor's
- Committee on Marihuana, The Marihuana Problem in the City of New York
- ("The LaGuardia Report," 1944); and National Commission on Marihuana and
- Drug Abuse, Marihuana: A Signal of Misunderstanding ("Nixon-Shafer Report,"
- 1972).
- Nevertheless, governments around the world have consistently ignored the
- wisdom of the report and have instead opted for the counterproductive
- policy of Marijuana Prohibition.
- Ironically, another major commission study is set to commence next year.
- The recently enacted federal crime bill establishes a commission to be
- known as the "National Commission on Crime Control and Prevention." One of
- its task forces shall evaluate current drug control policies and make
- recommendations regarding necessary improvements. [Congressional Record,
- Sunday, August 21, 1994, pages H8851-H8852.]
- NORML believes that it is time for society to stop ignoring the evidence.
- According to NORML National Director Richard Cowan, "The centennial of this
- report reminds us of two very important points: (1) Marijuana has not always
- been illegal. This is a 20th century aberration like its contemporary --
- communism. (2) When marijuana is freely available, as it is in Holland today,
- there will be benefits to society -- not just to marijuana consumers -- while
- prohibition costs everyone." Matthew Atha, M.Sc., a British drug abuse
- research and information consultant, expressed a similar frustration.
- "Governments should start looking at the facts rather than exploiting emotions
- and myths," he said. It is noteworthy that even the British government
- continues to ignore its own report. "Regrettably, the government is not
- prepared to take action to stop the criminalization of millions of British
- cannabis smokers," said Mike Goodman, director of Release (the 27-year-old
- British anti-prohibition organization).
-
- Medicinal Marijuana Implications ...
- The Indian Hemp report also concluded: "[T]he occasional use of hemp in
- moderate doses may be beneficial; but this use may be regarded as medicinal
- in character." [Volume I, page 264.] Yet one hundred years later, the U.S.
- government rigidly adheres to its policy of arresting patients who use
- marijuana for medicine. This must stop!
-
- November 15, 1994, is National Medical Marijuana Day. Patients, doctors,
- health care providers, and other concerned citizens will demonstrate in
- front of the White House and other government offices throughout the nation
- to make the simple plea for compassion, "Stop Attesting Sick People!"
- (Contact NORML for more information about the event, and contact Dr. Lester
- Grinspoon for more information about medicinal marijuana. [Dr. Grinspoon is
- an Associate Professor of Psychiatry at Harvard Medical School and author
- of Marihuana, the Forbidden Medicine.])
- * Tod Mikuriya, M.D., is a private practice psychiatrist and marijuana
- researcher/historian. A former marijuana program director for the National
- Institute of Mental Health (1967), Dr. Mikuriya has studied the entire
- 3,281-page Indian Hemp Drugs Commission Report.
- Dr. Mikuriya will chair an Indian Hemp Drugs Commission Report Centennial
- panel at the Drug Policy Foundation's 8th International Conference on Drug
- Policy Reform. The panel will feature marijuana historian Michael Aldrich,
- Ph.D., economics and drug policy specialist Dale Gieringer, Ph.D., and
- CityUniversity of New York pharmacology professor John Morgan, M.D. The panel
- will convene on Saturday, November 19, 1994, from 2:15-3:45 p.m., at Loews
- L'Enfant Plaza Hotel, Washington, D.C.
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