Berkeley City Council resolution proposes support for medical marijuana lawsuit

Berkeley City Council will vote on a resolution
Tuesday to support a lawsuit filed by the city of Oakland against the
U.S. Department of Justice

Medical Marijuana Advocates Take Fight to DC

As the Executive Director of Americans for Safe Access,
it’s my privilege to meet and facilitate the work of medical cannabis
advocates throughout the nation. In the week before yesterday’s
election, I drove all over Arkansas, visiting counties to drop off signs
and connect with activists. This is an amazing movement, made up of
compassionate people and patients willing to fight for their health.
Last night we learned of many victories for patients who can be helped
by cannabis, at both the state and federal levels. Most directly, the
voters of Massachusetts
overwhelmingly supported a compassionate use law, bringing the total
number of medical marijuana states to 18 (plus the District of
Columbia)!

The results for Congress were especially positive for our movement —
95 percent of our Congressional champions who ran were reelected.
Patients and their supporters are excited to welcome medical cannabis
supporters Elizabeth Warren and Tammy Baldwin to the Senate. Fresh faces
in the House and Senate mean that new champions of the cause can
emerge, and Americans for Safe Access
and other organizations will be working hard to provide Congressmen and
women with plenty of opportunities to stand up for patients.

The lead-up to last night’s results was an exciting campaign season
for medical marijuana patients and advocates. In response to President
Obama’s crackdown on medical marijuana states, we organized voters
throughout the nation with Camp WakeUpObama,
bringing our message to Obama campaign headquarters and events in
nationwide and local actions. In October, the Appeals Court heard our lawsuit
challenging the federal government’s policy of marijuana as "without
accepted medical use," and the forthcoming court decision may set the
agenda in the coming year. We’ve further deepened our relationships with
the scientific and medical community. Superstring theorist Dr. John Schwarz wrote an op-ed
in favor of treating the science of marijuana fairly, and medical
associations have been increasingly outspoken in opposing laws against
medical marijuana, with the California Medical Association recently calling on Governor Jerry Brown to support rescheduling the drug to make it more available.

We now have a second term of the Obama administration, led by a
president that has publicly expressed support for state medical
marijuana laws, yet overseen an unprecedented federal attack on them. We
have new state legislators who will join the nation-wide conversation
happening in state capitals from coast to coast. We have new Senators
and Congressman who are empowered to end the federal state divide. And
an additional state now recognizes the medical need for cannabis.

Though the voters of Arkansas did not pass a medical marijuana
initiative, organizers in the state are fired up and ready to take the
issue up with their legislature. This movement is ready for the second
Obama administration. We are ready for a House with an unchanged
partisan dynamic, but many new faces, Republican and Democratic, who
support medical cannabis. We are ready for a Senate that includes
supporters of our cause. Because of these victories, Americans for Safe
Access will start the new year with a strong focus on the federal
government. In February, medical cannabis advocates, researchers,
doctors and legal professionals will come to together to work to end the
federal-state divide over cannabis access. Our National Medical Cannabis Unity Conference
will bring the fight for access from the statehouses to the Capitol.
The lawmakers elected yesterday will be the ones we will meet with, and
we are eager to begin the dialogue. See you in February!

Colorado and Washington vote to legalize marijuana for recreational use

It’s not medical marijuana. It’s not
decriminalization. It’s completely legal pot – and voters in Colorado
and Washington decided they would become the first states in the country
to legalize and regulate marijuana for recreational use, ushering in a
huge victory for drug law reform advocates.

Additional Links

The new laws differ in each state, but the
cores are the same and will legalize the recreational use of marijuana
for people 21 and over, require a hefty tax on each sale, and enforce
strict DUI laws.

"The victories in Colorado and Washington are
of historic significance not just for Americans but for all countries
debating the future of marijuana prohibition in their own countries,"
said Ethan Nadelmann, executive director of the Drug Policy Alliance
(DPA). "This is now a mainstream issue, with citizens more or less
divided on the issue but increasingly inclined to favor responsible
regulation of marijuana over costly and ineffective prohibitionist
policies."

The campaigns to legalize marijuana succeeded
in part by deep-pocketed donors. Among the campaigns’ many contributors
were Peter Lewis, the Progressive Insurance chairman who has been a
long-time advocate of marijuana legalization, and Rick Steves, the
famous travel writer and PBS host.

The initiatives were also financially backed in part by pro-legalization advocacy groups DPA and the Marijuana Policy Project.

But it was the campaigns’ arguments about why
marijuana should be legalized that helped win over voters. From
reducing the cost of law enforcement and weakening drug cartels to
adding much-needed tax revenue in a time when it is needed most, the
pros of legalization outweighed the cons.

"It’s ridiculous to be trying to maintain the
law enforcement effort

What Obama’s Re-election Means for Medical Marijuana

The re-election of President Barack Obama Tuesday represents the
least bad outcome for the medical marijuana and overall
decriminalization movement, given the President’s track record, and his
rival’s statements about the issue.

GOP candidate Mitt Romney promised to fight medical marijuana "tooth
and nail" if he was elected. Barack Obama’s administration has cracked
down on the medical marijuana industry in the last year, while stating
that it respects state medical marijuana laws.

We expect elements of the crackdown to continue in the next four
years, if only because there’s too much bureaucratic inertia to stop the
70 year-long federal war on the plant. But many activists hope the
President will tackle drug law reform, now that he doesn’t have to win
another election.

Rep. Nancy Pelosi has said Congress needs to address the medical
marijuana issue, and the administration has floated trial balloons about
pot law reform in the election’s run-up. The apparent legalization of
marijuana in Colorado and Washington will test the re-elected President,
of course. Law and order types within and outside the Democratic party
will demand swift retribution on the states. States rights advocates on
the right, as well as progressives on the left will demand the
Administration stay out.

Kris Hermes, spokesperson for medical marijuana lobby Americans for Safe Access agreed President Obama was the least bad option.

"That pretty much hits the nail on the head," he said. "At least it’s
a familiar face now. We don’t expect necessarily a change in stance
from President Obama, but we’re certainly still willing to work with him
to develop a sensible public heath policy with regard to medical
marijuana. Failing that we have an ongoing lawsuit against his
administration that we will pursue until marijuana is reclassified."

Update: 11:03 p.m.
Amendment 64 and its opponent, Colorado Gov. Hickenlooper agree: Colorado has legalized pot for adults 21 and over.

Reuters and the Associated Press is also calling Washington
Initiative 502 as a win. The state of Washington becomes the second
state in the same night to legalize pot, after about 75 years of
national prohibition.

It’s poetic pot legalization is beginning in the Western states,
given that Colorado was the first state in the Union to pass anti-pot
legislation in the early 20th century. Other Western states followed
suit, and led a movement to urge the federal government for a national
ban. The feds initially didn’t want the job.

Seventy-five years later, Morgan Fox, with the Marijuana Policy
Project in D.C. says "Americans have been sick of the war on marijuana
for quite some time. Coloradoans and Washingtonians decided to take it
into their own hands."

Polls predicted accurately I-502 as a winner, and A64 as a
nail-biter. "Our opponents came out in force in the last few weeks and
tried to spread a lot of misinformation," he said.

Now, Colorado and Washington have the opportunity to show the country
how to regulate and control the drug, Fox said. He thinks the states
will succeed and doesn’t see the feds interfering.

"I think we’re probably going to see some level of federal
enforcement," he said, but the Administration lacks the political will
to shut the state systems down if they’re implemented safely.

"Personally I’m looking at this as the beginning of the end of marijuana prohibition."

Medical Marijuana: Obama Administration Continues Reefer Madness

Voters in six states will be weighing in on the issue of
decriminalizing medical marijuana, which has come under stepped-up
prosecution on the federal level in recent years. Here’s the latest
science on the pros and cons of its use for a variety of health
indications.

"The basic concept of using medical marijuana for the same
purposes and with the same controls as other drugs prescribed by
doctors, I think that’s entirely appropriate."

Barack Obama, 2008

At a time when six states are holding referendums on marijuana,* it
seems important to get a clearer understanding of what Barack Obama
meant by "the same controls." Truthout spoke with Steph Sherer,
executive director of Americans for Safe Access (ASA), the nation’s
largest organization of scientists, physicians and patients who advocate
for the decriminalization of medical marijuana. This is just a taste of
what Barack apparently meant:

  • During the 31/2 years of the Obama administration, the Drug
    Enforcement Administration (DEA), an arm of the Department of Justice
    (DOJ), conducted more raids on state-licensed dispensaries than the Bush
    administration did in eight years. The DEA hit more than 200
    dispensaries, confiscated the marijuana and left a trail of wreckage in
    their wake. A dozen proprietors are in prison and nearly 100 more are
    awaiting prosecution;
  • The most effective method the DEA employs, is to write a menacing
    letter to the landlord who owns the building where the dispensary
    operates, threatening him with closure even though the building is up to
    code: This has resulted in a further 400 closures at least;
  • The DEA also has been obstructing scientific research into
    marijuana. Brad Burge, an executive officer with the Multidisciplinary
    Association for Psychedelic Studies (MAPS), told me how. For the past 11
    years, MAPS, in collaboration with botanist/soil scientist Lyle Craker,
    PhD, of the University of Massachusetts, has sought to obtain a permit
    from the DEA to grow marijuana for research purposes: The DEA has
    consistently turned down their application with one excuse or another.
    Finally MAPS got fed up and is seeking relief in the First Circuit Court
    of Appeals. It’s worth a mention that MAPS is not an aging-hippie
    commune, but rather a major foundation that bankrolls medical and
    psychiatric research, here and abroad, by top scientists with an
    interest in hallucinogenic drugs and marijuana;
  •   Had he wished to do so, Obama could have deftly reined in the DEA,
    for the term of its Bush-appointed administrator, Michelle Leonhart,
    was slated to expire around the time of his inauguration. Instead of
    replacing her, Obama appointed her to another full term in office;
  •  The IRS has gotten into the act by harassing dispensary owners on
    the basis that they did not pay enough income tax, even though in almost
    every instance the proprietors did in fact pay the requisite amount of
    tax;
  • The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, though not an arm of the
    White House, is governed by the President and by Congress. It has
    squeezed Citigroup, Wells Fargo and Bank of America, along with credit
    card companies, to deny services to medical marijuana businesses that
    are legal under state law. According to ASA, no large bank in Colorado
    will service legal medical marijuana businesses;
  • The National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) has begun obstructing
    research by denying marijuana to scientists. Thus, Sue Sisley, MD, a
    psychiatrist and internist at the University of Arizona, sought to
    conduct a trial of marijuana for treating Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder
    (PTSD), a condition that is severely refractory to currently-used
    medications. Her PTSD study was approved by the US Food and Drug
    Administration (FDA); all she needed was the weed, which NIDA grows from
    11-year-old crops. NIDA declined her request and sent her a ten-page
    trashing of the very protocol the drug experts at the FDA had approved;
    at this writing her important study is in limbo.

To Steph Sherer, the most outrageous maneuver by the DOJ is the "Cole Memo."
This document was sent to all US Attorneys across the country,
threatening governors as well as state and local officials with
punishment under federal law, which bans marijuana, if they signed a
medical marijuana decriminalization bill into law.

Whatever the outcome of the election for the president, 2012 is
likely to be a red-letter year for marijuana activists. Five states –
Arkansas, Colorado, Massachusetts, Oregon and Washington – are holding
referendums that would, to some degree, legalize marijuana. The latest polls show that the referendums in Colorado,
Massachusetts, and Washington State are likely to succeed. Montana’s
Referendum 124, which seeks to tighten controls on marijuana, is likely
to go down in flames. Arkansas’
legalization seems dicey, while Oregon’s proposition trails narrowly,
but the remarkable fact about the polling data is that it cuts across
the red/blue divide.

With the US public in general favors decriminalizing marijuana,
and propositions to that effect on state ballots, could it be that
marijuana is more dangerous than we had heretofore thought, and the Feds
are protecting our health?

No. The single best source on the indications and side effects of
medical marijuana was published in 2010 by Health Canada, the equivalent
of our FDA (Information for Health Care Professionals:
Marijuana). Since that date, new indications have come under study, but
nothing gruesome has emerged to warrant Obama’s war on marijuana. As in
any hot field of science, some indications will hold up, while others
will turn out to be false leads. New side effects may emerge, but
marijuana has been around for so many centuries that it probably holds
few unwelcome surprises for us. But there was a surprise of an opposite
nature from a team at Yale,
which found alcohol’s "gateway" effect – its proclivity to lead to
addiction to some other drug – to opiates is much greater than
marijuana; if you abuse alcohol you are much more likely subsequently to
abuse opiates. This is one more data point that belies the myth that
"reefer madness" leads to opiate addiction.

Marijuana has been tried for many indications, among them pain,
anorexia nervosa, multiple sclerosis, Parkinson’s disease and bladder
dysfunction. Three indications that are acceptably well-studied, solid
and frequent – for which there exists an adequate body of data to draw
inferences, bearing in mind that subsequent clinical trials could knock
this preliminary work right out of the water – are described below.

Preliminary Considerations

I use the word "marijuana" where some authors prefer "cannabis": In
plain English, a joint of dried leaves. When I use the term "THC," I
mean a capsule containing a measured amount of only one chemical,
delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol. The chemicals comprising the
pharmacologically interesting components of the leaf are called
cannabinoids, and with the exception of THC are identified as CBC, CBD,
CBG and so forth.

There are two major ways of delivering cannabinoids. Naturalistic
experiments seek to replicate the real-life use of marijuana as closely
as possible, in which case the subjects or patients puff on a joint. The
advantage of this method is that the subject gets the full dose of
cannabinoids across the lung alveoli and into the bloodstream. The
disadvantage is that the investigator does not know for sure which
cannabinoid or combination is responsible for the pharmacological
effect, although he can be reasonably sure that it is predominantly THC.
Standardized cigarettes are available with a fixed amount of THC, but
smokers can circumvent this to a certain extent by the depth and
frequency of inhalations. THC capsules solve this problem, but raise
another: The full amount of THC is not absorbed from the gut. Both
complications can be gotten around by measuring plasma levels.

A matter of concern is that the smoked marijuana leaf contains many
of the same carcinogens as ordinary cigarettes. Of course, this is not
an issue in research studies, but until the matter of carcinogenicity is
settled, users of marijuana would do better to ingest it in tea or
brownies.

Nausea and Vomiting

The most widely known indication for marijuana is the control of
nausea and vomiting in cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy and/or
radiation.

Anti-cancer drugs work by killing off rapidly-dividing cells, which
include, but are not confined to, cancer cells; the cells of the
gastrointestinal tract "turn over" very rapidly, making them unwanted
targets of chemotherapeutic agents. Radiation also rakes the gut raw,
causing nausea and vomiting. Drugs that suppress nausea and vomiting are
called anti-emetics, and there are a number of such drugs on the
market, of which Compazine may be the most familiar, though not the most
effective. Over the years, however, mounting anecdotal accounts attest
to the effectiveness of smoking of marijuana for suppressing nausea and
vomiting. This indication for marijuana is so well known that we need
not belabor the point, though today marijuana is usually administered in
capsules containing THC – the principal active ingredient, in a dose
range of 5 mg to 20 mg daily in divided doses.

Less familiar are the uses of marijuana to ameliorate the wasting
syndrome and loss of appetite in AIDS and cancer patients. Anorexia –
loss of appetite – is one of the more difficult-to-manage complications
of cancer, because many cancer patients simply do not want to eat. Some
patients do benefit, in doses of 2.5 mg to 5 mg of THC three times a
day, but a comparative trial of THC versus megestrol acetate [Mantovani G
et al: Oncologist 2010;15:200-211] found the latter drug to be superior
in both appetite stimulation and weight gain. The picture is somewhat
brighter for anorexia and weight loss in AIDS patients: Oral THC
(Marinol) is approved for AIDS-related weight loss in Canada, and
several studies, including one large one [1], have found it effective in anorexia.

Anorexia nervosa is an eating disorder which has been little studied
for marijuana’s efficacy either in the smoked or THC form. The available
evidence is disappointing; one would expect that a drug which causes
the "munchies" would benefit patients with anorexia nervosa, but such is
not the case. Possibly anorexia from cancer and AIDS on the one hand,
and anorexia nervosa on the other, are driven by different
neuropsychological mechanisms. Anorexia nervosa is marked by a
misperception of body image; the patient thinks she is too fat even when
she is wasting away. AIDS and cancer patients do not evince such a
misperception.

Cancer Pain

In Canada, Sativex (a compound of cannabinoids), is approved as an
adjunct to opiate analgesics for adults with moderate to severe,
advanced cancer pain in clinical situations where even the highest
tolerated dose of opiates is inadequate. Is THC alone adequate for
cancer pain?

One placebo-controlled study found that 15mg and 20mg, but not 5mg
and10mg, of THC delivered significant relief from moderate to severe
pain from advanced cancer. However, the patients could not tolerate the
higher dose owing to over-sedation and confusion. One wonders, however,
if the attending physicians might not welcome over-sedation if it were
they who were dying of cancer.

Controlled studies compared THC with opiates. In one study, the
opiate was 60 mg to 120 mg of codeine against 10 mg and 20 mg of THC.
Aside from over-sedation – difficulty walking and blurred vision – 20 mg
THC caused severe anxiety. Though the higher dose of THC was comparable
to codeine for analgesia, it was not deemed useful owing to its side
effects.

THC clearly has a place in the management of cancer pain, but on the
basis of limited data, opiates are probably superior analgesics. It is
probably useful as an adjunctive agent. Marijuana has been found to
augment the analgesic effects of morphine and oxycodone without altering
opiate plasma levels; the implication is that opiates might be given in
lower doses, with fewer side effects, but the same degree of analgesia.
This hypothesis remains to be tested. In the meantime, patients in pain
should not be deprived of therapeutically adequate doses of opiates;
pain is not a moral issue.

Non-Cancer Pain

Two types of common non-cancer pain for which the evidence is either
adequate, compelling or promising are described below. Other types of
pain, i.e., post-operative, had to be left out because of inadequate or
inconclusive studies.

Arthritis

Rheumatologists (specialists in joint diseases) recognize three types of arthritis:

  • Osteoarthritis, a degenerative disease caused by the breakdown of
    the "padding" cartilage between bones. It is the most common form of
    arthritis; the rubbing of bone against bone causes pain and
    inflammation. Marijuana has both analgesic and anti-inflammatory
    effects, so it is not surprising that it is reported to be effective for
    symptomatic relief of osteoarthritis
  • Rheumatoid Arthritis (RA), less common than osteoarthritis, is an
    autoimmune disease (the organism produces antibodies that attack its own
    tissues). A good controlled trial using Sativex, led the authors of
    Health Canada to conclude that "the results indicated a therapeutic
    potential for cannabinoids in RA and further research was suggested."
  •  Juvenile Arthritis. Few physicians would be likely to advocate the
    use of marijuana in children at the present time because scientists do
    not know the effects of the drug on development, However, older teens
    could probably use the drug safely.

Multiple Sclerosis

Multiple sclerosis
(MS) is one of the most heartening indications for marijuana. The
disease, which is irreversible, is marked by the patchy degeneration of
the myelin sheath that surrounds nerve fibers. Myelin serves the purpose
of an insulator that ensures the orderly dispersion of electrical
signals in the brain. When the sheath begins to deteriorate, the
electrical activity is no longer confined to discrete pathways; it goes
wild and the patient starts to experience neurological and psychiatric
symptoms, among them painful spasticity, muscle weakness, visual
disturbances and depression. As the disease progresses, the patient
becomes increasingly disabled and may end up in a wheelchair. People
with MS have about the same life expectancy as the general population,
but the quality of life can be ghastly. In other cases, however, the
disease is mild and sufferers can hope to lead a reasonably normal life

Fortunately, the pharmaceutical industry has developed powerful new
drugs to treat the symptoms and arrest the progression of MS.
Corticosteroids are effective for treating acute flare-ups of the
illness. Interferons slow the course of the disease. Copaxone injections
block the immune system’s assault on the myelin sheath, thereby
preventing further degeneration. Other effective, specific drugs have
hit the market in the past few years. And older drugs are available for
treating specific symptoms such as bladder incontinence and depression.

Yet two recent Canadian surveys [2]
 found that, depending on the province, a third to nearly a half of MS
sufferers had either experimented with marijuana or used it regularly
for relief of pain and spasms. MS may be an instance where the patients
are ahead of the scientists: Two large clinical trials [3]
sought to assess the efficacy of smoked marijuana for pain and spasms.
Outcome was measured by patient reports and by a rating scale called the
Ashworth Scale. In both studies, the patients reported significant
relief that could not be measured on the neurologists’ Ashworth Scale;
it is now believed that the Scale may be defective and that the patients
just might be correct. While the scientists dither over this one, MS
continues to be one of the major uses for marijuana. It would not be
surprising if marijuana turned out to exert anti-inflammatory properties
in MS sufferers, as it does in patients with arthritis.

Other Conditions

Candidate Obama was correct: Marijuana is no different from any other
drug, only older, centuries older. But thanks to the hysteria embodied
in movies like "Reefer Madness," little serious research was conducted
until after World War II. As far as the pharmacological community was
concerned, marijuana was a "new" drug (history repeats itself) and like
any new drug with a broad spectrum of action (analgesic,
anti-inflammatory, anti-emetic), marijuana was tried against a plethora
of indications. These include neuropathic pain (that is, pain caused by
damage to the nerve, as in AIDS neuropathy, as distinguished from
pressure on the body’s pain receptors, as caused by malignant tumors), and glaucoma,
for both of which the available evidence is pretty solid.There are
theoretical reasons, namely the presence of receptors for marijuana
alkaloids in muscle tissue, why marijuana might be effective in movement
disorders like Parkinson’s disease. Preliminary studies of various
movement disorders are encouraging but small in scale.
THC dilates the bronchial tubes and decreases bronchospasm, so it has
been tried with some success in asthma, but this indication would not
seem to be a matter of great urgency because there are a number of
excellent anti-asthma drugs on the market. There are also a number of
drugs for treating migraine and cluster headaches, both of which are
often excruciating and refractory to conventional treatments. Curiously,
most of the same drugs are used for migraine and cluster headaches, and
a few case reports or small trials suggest that marijuana is also
effective for both; this would seem to be an area that merits a faster
pace of research.

The foregoing considerations do not exhaust the afflictions against
which marijuana has been tested. Notably absent are psychiatric
indications. Clinical trials for anxiety and depression are
contradictory: Some patients get better, others get worse. Of greater
concern are a number of studies that suggest a link between marijuana
and psychotic ideation and suicidal thoughts or attempts. To confound
matters even further there are data reporting that marijuana has
antipsychotic activity.

One publication of great interest – assuming it can be supported –
found that an evening dose of THC calms the restlessness and mental
agitation of demented, elderly patients. [4]
If supported, it would be a major breakthrough because there is as yet
no safe and effective medication for this patient population. Marijuana
has also been tried with promising results in Alzheimer’s dementia, but
again, the studies are small and require replication before marijuana
can be advocated for these indications, bearing in mind the fragility of
the data in the field of psychiatry.

Side Effects

The most conspicuous side effects of marijuana are related to the
central nervous system (CNS). Although the occasional recreational use
of marijuana is probably harmless, heavy usage – usually smoking – is
associated with disorientation, confusion, depersonalization, and
paranoia. According to the Health Canada paper cited earlier, persons with schizophrenia are at much greater risk to these side effects.

Marijuana exerts a significant effect on thought processes
(cognition). It disrupts memory, attention, concentration and scores on
psychological tests designed to measure cognitive processes. There is no
doubt about the deleterious side effects of marijuana on short-term
cognition, but its long-term effects are more controversial. Further
research on the long-term effects of marijuana is required, but it is
difficult to see how this can be accomplished in the present climate of
re-criminalization by the Obama administration; users of marijuana are
unlikely to come forward for study.

Non-CNS side effects are generally dose-related; moderate
recreational use is unlikely to produce worrisome deleterious effects.
Clinicians are concerned about the use of marijuana by AIDS patients,
because marijuana may suppress the immune system, although the data are
conflicting. More convincingly, studies show that initial use of
marijuana increases the heart rate, but after 8 to10 days the heart rate
fell below normal. Since marijuana exerts numerous effects on the
cardiovascular system, there is some concern that heavy use may
predispose to angina pectoris and heart attacks.

Three studies spanning 20 years and summarized in the Health Canada paper
concur that smoking of marijuana by the mother while pregnant causes
cognitive deficits (attention span, visual analysis, hypothesis testing)
in the adult offspring. Effects on the newborn, on the other hand, are
contradictory.

Marijuana clearly has multiple effects on human sperm, such as a decrease in sperm count. [5] However, infertility has not been demonstrated yet.

A number of studies have demonstrated that the liver is a major
target organ for damage from heavy marijuana usage. Daily smoking of
marijuana for protracted periods of time has been linked to fatty liver
and to fibrosis – the replacement of functional liver tissue by inert
fibrous tissue. Oddly, studies on the effect of marijuana on the course
of Hepatitis C are conflicting, a significant issue which is
counterintuitive to the known damage that marijuana causes to liver
tissue. [6]

Conclusion

There is good evidence for the efficacy of marijuana in cancer and
non-cancer chronic pain, nausea and vomiting from chemotherapeutic
drugs, radiation and multiple sclerosis, as well as promising evidence
for a number of other illnesses. Like every other drug, marijuana has
side effects, but they are comparatively few and confined to heavy
users. Barack Obama was correct in likening marijuana to other
pharmaceutical products, right in promising to end W’s marijuana witch
hunt, and deceitfully wrong in escalating that witch hunt beyond Bush’s
wildest dreams. It is to be hoped that the referendums legalizing
marijuana for medical use pass and the federal persecution of those
using, studying or providing the drug for medical purposes cease.

* The six states holding referendums concerning marijuana include:
Arkansas – Arkansas Medical Marijuana Act of 2012 – Legalizes marijuana for medical indications
Colorado – Amendment 64 – Legalizes possession and growing of small quantities of marijuana
Massachusetts – Question 3 – Legalizes marijuana for medical indications
Montana – Referendum 124 – seeks to restrict availability of marijuana
Oregon – Measure 80 – Would license production and sale of marijuana
Washington State – Initiative 502 – Decriminalizes up to 1 oz for personal use

1.
Beal JE et al: J Pain Symptom. Manage. (1995) 10:89-97

2.
Page SA et al. (2003) Canadian Journal of Neurological Science 30:201-205 and Clark A.J. et al.(2004)neurology.62:2098-2100

3.
Zajicek J et al.: Lancet (2003) 362:1517-1526 and Wade D.T. et al. (2004):Multiple Sclerosis 10:434-441

4.
Walther S et al Psychopharmacology (Berl)2009; 185:524-528

5.
Whan L B et al:(2006) Fertility and Sterility 85:653-660

6.
Fernandez-Rodriguez C M et al.(2004) Liver International 24:477-483

Councilman Bilbray Backs Medical Marijuana Measure for IB

Only four days before the election, Imperial Beach Councilman Brian Pat Bilbray has endorsed Proposition S, which aims to legalize medical marijuana dispensaries in Imperial Beach.

What Does the Election Mean for Medical Marijuana Patients?

You’ve read pundits on the impact of the tight presidential race on
the budget, on taxes, even on the weather. One important issue that
could be decided by Tuesday’s election is medical marijuana. With
federal and state policy in conflict and in flux, medical marijuana is
one of America’s highest-profile unresolved issues. After this election,
resolution may be a step closer.

My organization, Americans for Safe Access,
has been leading the fight for medical marijuana patients for ten
years, and we were not going to sit back during this important election
just because Obama says he’s friendlier to our cause than his opponents.
There have been more DEA raids against medical marijuana facilities in
the four years of the Obama administration than there were in eight
years of Bush, but President Obama was the first president to publicly
express sympathy for suffering patients who can be helped by medical
cannabis. Rather than attacking Obama’s poor record on the issue and
siding with another candidate, we helped rally patients and supporters
to ask him to back off the raids, by launching CampWakeUpObama.com and staging rallies and actions across the nation.

Did we wake up Obama? Only time will tell — if he earns another term
— but certainly the issue of medical marijuana was in the spotlight as
Governor Romney and Representative Ryan were forced to answer questions
about it. More often than not, it seemed, their somewhat sympathetic
statements about cannabis had to be retracted by their campaigns. If the Republicans win the presidency, along with ever-increasing numbers of Republican Congressmen supporting the cause, patients will continue to press for friendlier federal laws.

We will press on no matter who wins the federal election because
state laws are continuing their trend toward greater access to marijuana
for patients and researchers. Right now, about a third of the country
lives in a state with a medical cannabis law. Cities and states are confronting
federal law enforcement in court over medical cannabis facilities and
regulations. Medical marijuana is in need of a resolution at the federal
level.

The president and Congress each have the power to end the
federal-state divide over medical marijuana policy. In the next weeks or
months, the judiciary may prod the policymakers to act by ruling on the
patients’ lawsuit heard by Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit on October 16th. Americans for Safe Access v Drug Enforcement Administration,
as the lawsuit is named, argues that the rejection of marijuana’s
medical value by federal policy is not based on a reasonable
understanding of the available science, and does not conform to the
letter or spirit of the Controlled Substances Act. A similar argument is
being advanced by noted physicist Dr. John Schwarz,
the father of Superstring Theory, who has authored an op-ed urging
President Obama to uphold his promise to put science before politics,
and base marijuana policy on its demonstrated medical value. Meanwhile,
patients can take matters into their own hands, by using tools like VoteMedicalMarijuana.org to inform themselves on their Representative’s record before casting a ballot.

Beyond your vote, you can help the three medical marijuana campaigns
with a donation or with your time. There are active, closely-fought
initiatives for medical marijuana access that could use help, in Arkansas, Massachusetts and Montana
— click on the state for a link to the campaign. I traveled to
Arkansas this week, and I’m making signs and distributing them to
activists around the state to help get out the vote. Your help will make
a difference as well.

With states voting on whether to adopt medical access to marijuana
next week, and many bills pending in state legislatures, the tension
between state and federal positions on marijuana will only rise. The
president, congressmen and state and local officials that we elect next
week will be empowered to settle this issue once and for all — if they
choose to.

Medical Marijuana Group May Gather Signatures for Pot Dispensary Measure

The City Clerk on Monday gave a group of medical marijuana proponents
a green light to gather signatures for a ballot measure intended to
allow about 100 pot dispensaries to remain open in the city.

According to an official summary, the ordinance would allow groups of
five or fewer to jointly grow and share marijuana. Collectives of six
or more would be technically prohibited under the ordinance. But the
city would barred from prosecuting a select 100 or so dispensaries which
meet certain conditions, including having opened before Sept. 14, 2007,
when the city first tried to place a moratorium on new pot shops.

The so-called limited immunity plan is supported by United Food and
Commercial Workers Local 770, which represents about 500 workers at 50 dispensaries, among others.

In addition to having opened prior to the September 2007 cutoff,
collectives must not have ceased operations for 90 days or more except
to relocate or in response to federal prosecution; must have no access
from adjacent residential zoned lots; and must pass annual police
department background checks.

Qualifying dispensaries would have 300 days to move to locations that
are a certain distance from schools, parks and other designated places.

A plan by City Councilman Paul Koretz similar to the proposed ballot
initiative is also moving through the city legislative process.

Backers of the proposed ballot measure have until Dec. 7 to gather
41,138 valid signatures to put the measure before voters on the May 21,
2013, general election ballot.

The move comes less than one month after medical marijuana proponents
were successful in getting the City Council to repeal a ban on medical
marijuana dispensaries.

The City Council in July had approved an ordinance banning all
storefront medical marijuana dispensaries but allowing patients and
licensed caregivers to grow their own cannabis. The so-called "gentle
ban" ordinance also allowed three or fewer parties to collectively grow
pot.

The Committee to Protect Patients and Neighborhoods

Medical Marijuana Is on Your Ballot

In a little over a week, we the voters will elect representatives who
will make momentous, sometimes life-or-death decisions on our behalf.
As a patient and advocate of medical marijuana, I am motivated this
election by strong, bipartisan support for this medicine — up to 80 percent
in recent polls. If you are part of the majority of Americans who
support cannabis access for medical purposes, you don’t need to be in
the three states with an initiative on the ballot to weigh in. My
organization, Americans for Safe Access,
has created a tool that allows you to make your vote for Congress a
vote for medical marijuana, by grading members of Congress on their
record on this issue: VoteMedicalMarijuana.org.

Based on their record since 1997, VoteMedicalMarijuana.org grades
Members of Congress up for reelection on a pass/fail basis. Those who
have generally voted for access to medical cannabis pass, and those who
generally vote against it fail. For example, the 72 percent of Democrats
and 29 percent of Republicans who voted this
May in favor of de-funding Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) raids
in medical cannabis states pass, and those who voted against it, fail.
VoteMedicalMarijuana.org also identifies key champions of medical
marijuana with the "honor roll" distinction, reserved for co-sponsors of
important legislation that protects state medical marijuana laws.

Our Congressional Representatives are our voice in Washington. By
voting for representatives who favor access, you are shaping public
policy. In just the last two years, medical marijuana supporters have
been key to statewide races,
defeating Steve Cooley in his race for Attorney General in California,
and electing Ellen Rosenblum as Attorney General of Oregon. Since
Congress holds the key to granting medical cannabis access nationwide,
supporters need to know whether or not their representative is on their
side.

You may have read about the federal lawsuit ASA v DEA
that was recently heard by the Court of Appeals in Washington, D.C. We
are excited and optimistic that the courts will recognize the medical
value of marijuana and force the government to properly reclassify it.
Once this is achieved, Congress can get to work on developing the
comprehensive public health policy that every patient deserves. It is
Congress that funds the aggressive federal enforcement campaigns against
state law-abiding medical cannabis facilities. And it is Congress that
has the power to let patients use a currently prohibited "medical
marijuana" defense in federal criminal trials. Your vote for your
Congressperson — and every American outside of my hometown of D.C. has
one — can be a vote for a sensible medical marijuana policy.

If you care about medical cannabis access, please visit VoteMedicalMarijuana.org
before you cast your vote. This information is based on the
Congressional record, but it is not comprehensive. If you don’t see your
Congressional, State Legislature or City Council race on this list, we
invite you to ask the candidates yourself, and share their responses
with us.

Voters in Arkansas, Massachusetts and Montana have the opportunity to
vote for state medical marijuana laws, but voters in every state can
and should weigh in on medical marijuana policy. Don’t let your vote be
ignored, and Vote Medical Marijuana on November 6th!

Medical Marijuana Advocates Launch New Election-Based Website

The medical marijuana advocacy group Americans for Safe Access (ASA) launched a new website today — VoteMedicalMarijuana.org
— that provides patients and their supporters with the tools they need
to make informed decisions about the candidates in their districts. The
new website will give visitors a pass/fail "grade" for how their Member
of Congress has voted on medical marijuana since 1997. For example, the
website details the 72 percent of Democrats and 29 percent of
Republicans who voted in favor of de-funding Drug Enforcement
Administration (DEA) raids in medical marijuana states this past May.

"Given that our elected officials decide whether and how to develop
medical marijuana policy that affects millions of patients in the U.S.,
it’s important for them to have the tools necessary to make decisions
that will impact their future," said Steph Sherer, Executive Director of
ASA, the country’s leading medical marijuana group. "The choices made
by patients and their supporters at the ballot box should take into
consideration the candidates’ record on medical marijuana."

Ultimately, advocates argue, it’s Congress that funds the aggressive
federal enforcement campaigns against state law-abiding medical cannabis
facilities, and it’s Congress that has the power to grant patients a
"medical necessity" defense in federal criminal trials, a right they are
not currently afforded. VoteMedicalMarijuana.org also identifies key
champions of medical marijuana with an "honor roll" distinction,
reserved for co-sponsors of important legislation that protects state
medical marijuana laws or seeks to develop a comprehensive federal
policy.