(CNN) -- With 20 U.S.
states allowing medical marijuana, and others weighing its medicinal or
recreational use, advocates of looser laws on weed appear to have the
advantage.
But
leading medical groups remain ambivalent, and opponents are now trying to
mobilize for upcoming votes in three states.
Florida will vote on whether to
legalize the medicinal use of marijuana in November. In New
York and Georgia, the state legislatures are debating medical marijuana, while
the District of Columbia City Council voted Tuesday to
decriminalize possession of small amounts of pot.
Meanwhile,
two more states -- Oregon and Alaska -- are expected to follow the lead of
Colorado and Washington and put full legalization on the ballot in 2014. And in
the year-plus since the Colorado and Washington votes, public opinion has swung
sharply in favor of loosening marijuana laws.
"That caught everyone, even
advocates, by surprise," said Ethan Nadelmann, executive director of the pro-legalization
Drug Policy Alliance.
In January, a CNN/ORC
International survey found 55% support for
legalization, with 44% opposing it. National polls shifted by about
10 percentage points between late 2012 and late 2013, with support for
legalization climbing to roughly the same level seen in the CNN poll, Nadelmann
said.
"A lot of people just began
to relax and see the sky's not going to fall. All we're doing is moving a
booming market from the underground to the legal world," he said.
Those trends were seen even in
states like Louisiana, where Republican Gov. Bobby Jindal told CNN in February that he'd be open to the "tightly
regulated" use of medical marijuana.
"If you look at public
opinion polls, support for legalizing medical marijuana is over 70% nationally,
even in the South," Nadelmann said.
Interactive map: A look at
marijuana laws in the U.S.
There's also growing pressure to change the drug's classification as a Schedule I controlled substance,
the federal designation for a drug with high risk and no medical use. CNN chief
medical correspondent Dr. Sanjay Gupta, who hosts an upcoming documentary on
the issue, argues that "Neither of those statements has
ever been factual."
Changing the designation would
allow scientists to put the drug's purported benefits and risks under closer
scrutiny, advocates like Gupta argue.
"I have sat in labs and personally
analyzed the molecules in marijuana that have such potential but are also a
source of intense controversy. I have seen those molecules turned into medicine
that has quelled epilepsy in a child and pain in a grown adult. I've seen it
help a woman at the peak of her life to overcome the ravages of multiple
sclerosis," Gupta writes. "I am more convinced than ever that it is
irresponsible to not provide the best care we can, care that often may involve
marijuana."
Two drugs based on chemical
compounds found in marijuana -- including the active ingredient, THC -- have
been approved by federal regulators and are available by prescription. A
cannabis-based mouth spray used to relieve chemotherapy side effects has been
approved in Canada and parts of Europe and has been submitted to the U.S. Food
and Drug Administration for its review.
The American Cancer Society says
research indicates that cannabis derivatives can help alleviate the pain and
nausea associated with chemotherapy, but it opposes marijuana smoking or
legalization. And in November, the American Medical Association reiterated its
stance that marijuana is "a dangerous drug" that should remain illegal. But it
also called for additional research and the use of "public health based
strategies, rather than incarceration" to control it.
Meanwhile, opponents say
residents of Colorado and Washington -- which issued its first marijuana licenses Wednesday -- may be feeling some
buyers' remorse.
"The white coats are
off," said Kevin Sabet, director of the anti-legalization group Smart
Approaches to Marijuana.
Sabet is a former White House
drug policy adviser who co-founded SAM with former Rep. Patrick Kennedy, who
has publicly battled his addiction to drugs and alcohol. In a letter to federal regulators,
the Justice Department and the White House this week, Sabet, Kennedy
and representatives of several leading anti-drug organizations argued that
removing marijuana from the Schedule I list "would be a mistake."
"We do strongly support
efforts to research the components of marijuana. We should break down the
barriers of such research by making it easier for researchers to access, store,
and administer such components," they wrote. But that can be done without
contributing to "the normalization of marijuana," they argued.
Dr. Sanjay Gupta: 'I am
doubling down' on medical marijuana
In states that have voted in
marijuana, Sabet said, residents are uncomfortable with the rise of a new weed
industry.
"What they're getting is
cookies and candies and ring pops that are targeted at kids. What they thought
they were getting was allowing adults to smoke unencumbered in their own
basement," he said.
Sabet said federal laws banning
pot aren't changing "anytime soon." His organization is raising money
and recruiting volunteers to fight the expected votes in Alaska and Oregon. But
he said anti-drug forces expect to lose votes in more states before a backlash
against legalization can take root.
"We don't need to have
voting on medicine," he said. "We need to have medicine in pharmacies
that can be prescribed by doctors."
News Source: edition.cnn.com






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