Article from The
Sun
Propaganda
Czar
JOHN P. WALTERS is a man on a mission to save Americans
from themselves. The director of the Office of National
Drug Control Policy told Congress he's battling widespread
"ignorance" about the dangers of marijuana, and about the
true motives of those who would permit its use for
medicinal purposes.
Legalization of the drug is their goal, he contends, which
Mr. Walters equates with "giving up" on the problem of drug
abuse.
Ignorant hicks we may be, but we know enough to be alarmed
about zealots from Washington using our tax dollars to
promote ideological crusades.
The Bush administration's drug czar is seeking the power to
cut off federal drug enforcement money to local police in
states where marijuana has been decriminalized for medical
use.
As of yesterday, that could include Maryland, where Gov.
Robert L. Ehrlich Jr. signed into law a bill that sharply
reduces the penalty for marijuana possession when the
defendant is seeking relief from symptoms of cancer, AIDS
and other devastating illnesses.
Mr. Walters, who waged a fierce last-minute lobbying effort
against the Maryland measure, also wants the authority to
run advertising campaigns against similar legislation in
other states.
This is frightening stuff from a career bureaucratic drug
warrior who is not a doctor yet claimed the Maryland
legislature had been "conned" into aggravating the state's
addiction problems by a "cynical, cruel and immoral effort
to use the sick and suffering" to legalize marijuana.
The federal government has no business using tax dollars to
help wage such lobbying campaigns, or to punish states that
don't fall into line.
Mr. Walters' obsession with marijuana is also wrong-headed,
says Del. Dan K. Morhaim, a sponsor of the Maryland
legislation and an emergency room physician who has seen
the drug wars from the front lines. Cocaine, heroin,
alcohol, tobacco - those are drugs that send people into
the emergency room every day, he said. Marijuana, almost
never. But pot does offer comfort, he said, when comfort is
all that doctors can provide.
Mr. Ehrlich, to his credit, gets it. He shrugged off
pressure from the White House and signed the bill.
Members of the House Government Reform Committee get it,
too. Objections to Mr. Walters' proposals by Rep. Elijah E.
Cummings and other Democrats may well put a stop to these
misbegotten ideas.
Eight other states have medical marijuana laws, and more
are pending. Most Americans know that the danger of drugs
lies elsewhere. Mr. Walters is wasting his firepower on the
wrong target.
Originally published May 23,
2003