USA : AMA calls for review of marijuana status

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Taken from MPP.org. :holysheep:

Big news: The American Medical Association adopted a new policy position today calling for the review of marijuana’s status as a Schedule I drug.
The revised policy “urges that marijuana’s status as a federal Schedule I controlled substance be reviewed with the goal of facilitating the conduct of clinical research and development of cannabinoid-based medicines, and alternate delivery methods.” While it goes on to explain that the AMA is not stating support for state medical marijuana laws, the new policy does fall in line with what is quickly becoming a universal understanding in American medicine: Marijuana has undeniable medical uses and federal law should reflect that reality.
The new policy marks a historic shift from the AMA’s previous position, which recommended that “marijuana be retained in Schedule I,” grouping marijuana with drugs such as heroin, LSD, and PCP that are deemed to have no accepted medical uses.
The AMA’s previous position was often cited by medical marijuana opponents as evidence that the drug’s medical efficacy was in question. This new policy will go a long way to convincing politicians and policy makers that the compassionate use of medical marijuana should not be blocked by outdated marijuana laws.


Source : hxxp://blog.mpp.org/medical-marijuana/nation%E2%80%99s-largest-medical-association-calls-for-review-of-marijuana%E2%80%99s-legal-status/11102009/
 
Very very interesting. Marijuana never belonged on the schedule 1 listings in the first place.

The mindset of the various "powers that be" is being forced to change. They aren't going willingly.

Marijuana should be completely legal for adults. Not sort of legal, not legal only for medical users, not something that should carry any penalty what-so-ever.

The ball is rolling, but is not on a level playing field yet.

Medical use is first. Then we can work on recreational use.

The lawmakers sip on their mixed drinks of alcohol while determining our right to take a puff of weed. That's true irony.
 
At least we are still moving forward...every step no matter how big or small counts...
 
StoneyBud said:
Marijuana should be completely legal for adults. Not sort of legal, not legal only for medical users, not something that should carry any penalty what-so-ever.

The only penalty it should carry is if caught DUI, although I tend to be very alert, aka paranoid, when driving after one or two it does affect many people.
 
Update, again sourced from mpp.org

In its official response to the AMA’s recent call for a review of marijuana’s status as a Schedule I drug (barring any medical use) under federal law, the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy stated that it would defer to “the FDA’s judgment that the raw marijuana plant cannot meet the standards for identity, strength, quality, purity, packaging and labeling required of medicine.”

While we’re not used to factual accuracy from ONDCP, in this case they’re wrong not once, but twice.

First, there is absolutely no reason that plant medicines can’t be standardized and controlled for purity and potency. Indeed, the Netherlands has been doing just that for years, with medical marijuana distributed in Dutch pharmacies that is “of pharmaceutical quality and complies with the strictest requirements,” according to the Dutch government.

Second, the FDA has never said that a natural plant product can’t be a medicine. Indeed the agency has a lengthy “Guidance for Industry: Botanical Drug Products,” specifically designed to aid developers of plant medicines. The document not only doesn’t rule out plants as medicines, it even states, “In the initial stage of clinical studies of a botanical drug, it is generally not necessary to identify the active constituents or other biological markers or to have a chemical identification and assay for a particular constituent or marker.” Given that the active components of marijuana are already well-known and extensively researched, marijuana is well ahead of where the FDA says plant products need to be to start the process of seeking FDA licensing.

Yes, the FDA did put out a press release in 2006 saying that “smoked marijuana” had not been shown to be a safe and effective medicine. That statement was utterly unscientific, as we pointed out at the time, but it was absolutely not a declaration that the plant could never be a medicine.
 

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