Academic Library
Home Register Login FAQ Contact Us Logout

The Need To Legalize Pot

TitleThe Need To Legalize Pot
# of Words1067
# of Pages (250 words per page double spaced)4.27

The Need To Legalize Pot




The Need To Legalize Pot


     Just in, California has become the first state to legalize pot!
Unfortunately, for all you proud owners of a two-foot-bong or a three-inch bowl,
you must have a prescription from a medical doctor before you light up.  Perhaps
it's only a crack in the ice, but it is a start to a long-awaited, controversial
issue that needs to be touched upon again.
     In the fall of 1996, Proposition 215 was passed in California,
legalizing the medical use of marijuana.  Even though the majority (56%) voted
to pass 215, opponents plan to continue to fight the measure.  It was also so in
Arizona, where Proposition 200, the Drug Medicalization, Prevention, and Control
Act, won 65% of the vote.  It says that Arizona's doctors can prescribe
marijuana, heroin, and LSD for patients when there is "medicinal value"
(California 62).  The passing of these two propositions has also helped the
release of prisoners convicted of drug possession (---).  With jail capacity
already overflowing, if you were to lock up a dealer, you therefore create a job
opening.
     Bob Randall, president of the Alliance for the Cannabis Therapeutics, a
Washington-based patients' right group, says as many as five-million sick
Americans might benefit from the legal access to marijuana.  Marijuana has been
found to: relieve nausea and stimulate appetite in people with cancer and AIDS,
control muscle spasms among people with multiple sclerosis and other
neurological disorder, reduce eye pressure among people with glaucoma, and some
say it also controls seizures, eases chronic pain, and relieves depression.  Dr.
Ernest Rosenbaum, a San Francisco cancer specialist, says he and many doctors
quietly recommend marijuana to patients who didn't respond to other medications.
A 1991 Harvard study found that about 40 % of cancer specialists surveyed had
recommended marijuana to relieve chemotherapy nausea, and about 48% said they
would prescribe the drug if it were made legal.
     An article was written in the October, 28, 1996 Time issue about a
former police commissioner, Jo Daly, who was diagnosed with colon cancer.  Jo
started chemotherapy for her cancer, but the side effects included "nuclear
implosion."  Then came a burning pain under the nails of her toes and fingers.
The good news was that she eventually found relief.  The bad news was that it
came from marijuana.  Daly tried Marinol, a substitute the FDA approved as a
synthetic version of THC (marijuana's psychoactive ingredient), without success
before she ended up turning to pot.  Even after the positive results and
outcomes of patients using marijuana, not everyone is in favor of legalizing the
drug.  Some people are still uptight about the whole issue of legalizing
marijuana and continue to set aside the benefits of pot.  "This proposition is
not about medicine," charges Orange County Sheriff Brad Gates, co-chairman of
Citizens for a Drug-Free California, the campaign opposing Prop. 215. "It's
about the legalization of marijuana" (36).

     Well, wake up, America!  There are far more benefits from the drug then
just medical.  Making the drug legally available, with tight regulatory controls,
would end the black market and with it, much of the violence; legalization would
reduce the number of people in prison, which in turn would reduce the government
budget...

This is ONLY a preview of the article. If you would like to view the entire document, you must subscribe to Academic Library. Please register below now!

Subscribe to Academic Library

When you subscribe to the Academic Library, you get 24-hour access to the online database containing full-text articles written by thousands of scholarly students. For only $8.95 per month, you receive unlimited monthly access to view and download all of our 40,000 articles available online. That is less than the price of one textbook!

This price includes:
  • 24-hours-a-day, 7 days a week unlimited access on any computer with Internet access
  • Complete access to all 40,000 articles, essays, and research papers
  • Ability to view and download virtually unlimited number of documents
  • Ability to browse through perfectly arranged catalog of articles
  • Superior search and relevancy ranking techniques using Google SiteSearch and our local search engine
  • Instant access to the online database after registration

You can pay by credit card, checking account. You get instant access after registration:

You will be billed $ 8.95 every 30 days (recurring billing) starting on the day you subscribe.
Your credit card will automatically be renewed for your convenience until you cancel.

If you are already registered, please click here to login.


Home | Register | Login | FAQ | Forgot Password | Privacy Policy | Disclaimer | Close Account | Contact Us | Logout

Copyright 1998-2007 Academic Library. Academic Library is designed only to assist students and researchers in the preparation of their own work. Anybody who use our services are responsible not only for writing their own papers, but also for citing Academic Library as a source when doing so. By accessing and using this page you agree to the Disclaimer.

If you wish to cancel your subscription to Academic Library, please click here.