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Davis Brightmon Marsh Ms. Ingram UWRT 1103 11/6/2015 Marijuana Scheduling and Reform Everyone has an opinion on the legalization of marijuana. These opinions are formed from personal experiences, advancements in research, and also just good old rumors. No matter what your view, there will always be defining factors on the subject and I hope to hit on them through my research. Marijuana has been misinterpreted and falsely accused for too long. There is a drug out there that is completely natural and has a list of medical values yet is still recognized to be as bad as heroin, LSD, MDMA, etc, according to the FDA’s drug scheduling system, The federal Controlled Substances Act (CSA) classifies marijuana as a Schedule I drug — one with a high potential for abuse and “no currently accepted medical use” — and criminalizes the acts of prescribing, dispensing, and possessing marijuana for any purpose.”(3.). Marijuana has actual research that shows its medical value which parts of our country have recognized and

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Marijuana Rescheduling

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Davis Brightmon Marsh

Ms. Ingram

UWRT 1103

11/6/2015

Marijuana Scheduling and Reform

Everyone has an opinion on the legalization of marijuana. These opinions are

formed from personal experiences, advancements in research, and also just good old

rumors. No matter what your view, there will always be defining factors on the subject

and I hope to hit on them through my research. Marijuana has been misinterpreted and

falsely accused for too long. There is a drug out there that is completely natural and

has a list of medical values yet is still recognized to be as bad as heroin, LSD, MDMA,

etc, according to the FDA’s drug scheduling system, “The federal Controlled

Substances Act (CSA) classifies marijuana as a Schedule I drug — one with a high

potential for abuse and “no currently accepted medical use” — and criminalizes the acts

of prescribing, dispensing, and possessing marijuana for any purpose.”(3.). Marijuana

has actual research that shows its medical value which parts of our country have

recognized and taken charge to legalize marijuana for medicinal use or, in some states,

recreational use. “The U.S. legal landscape surrounding “medical marijuana” is complex

and rapidly changing. Fourteen states — California, Alaska, Oregon, Washington,

Maine, Hawaii, Colorado, Nevada, Vermont, Montana, Rhode Island, New Mexico,

Michigan, and most recently, New Jersey — have passed laws eliminating criminal

penalties for using marijuana for medical purposes, and at least a dozen others are

considering such legislation.”(3.) With parts of the "United" States decriminalizing this

drug, other states continue to give prison sentences that ruin people's lives. “All the

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state laws allow patients to use and possess small quantities of marijuana for medical

purposes without being subject to state criminal penalties.”(3.) To add to this

information, more questions arise as to court cases that could be identical in one Illegal

state and the other legal.I look at our country as one that seems to be split in half and it

seems like some states are recognizing this but others are still learning. How can such

a innovative country seem to be stuck in the past. A drug that has been proven to have

medical value and shown no significant harm to anyone's health should not be labeled

as a schedule I drug.

Schedule I drugs are defined as the following: "Drugs with no current accepted

medical use and a high potential for abuse. Schedule I drugs are the most dangerous

drugs of all the drug schedules with potentially severe psychological or physical

dependence."(2.) Marijuana was placed under this schedule in the 1970's. It was

believed to be just as dangerous as all other hard drugs, more or less due to the fact no

research had been done or even been able to be pursued. There was a case study that

was longitudinal to determine addiction and marijuana effects, yet what I found to be

interesting was the lack of control they had over how much their patients used the

substance or did not use. “One hundred regular marijuana users volunteered to be

extensively interviewed in 1968–1970, and 97 were located and reinterviewed 6 to 8

years later. As part of each interview the subjects filled out a checklist review of 105

effects of marijuana.”(5.) The study was helpful yet hard to get more than just a little

information from due to the federal ban on marijuana. To this day, Marijuana continues

to be difficult to study and experiment with due to federal restrictions. It is easily

understandable that Marijuana would be placed in this schedule when no studies were

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possible and the war on drugs was more prominent than ever. What about now though?

We have states in the U.S that have legalized not only medically, but recreationally.

There are numerous reasons Marijuana needs to be rescheduled, the first being the fact

that the definition of a schedule I drug is having no medical value. According to NORML,

an organization dedicated to the reform of laws regarding Marijuana usage: "Modern

research suggests that cannabis is a valuable aid in the treatment of a wide range of

clinical applications. These include pain relief -- particularly of neuropathic pain (pain

from nerve damage) -- nausea, spasticity, glaucoma, and movement disorders.

Marijuana is also a powerful appetite stimulant, specifically for patients suffering from

HIV, the AIDS wasting syndrome, or dementia."(1.)

With such substantial evidence supporting marijuana's medical value, there is no

reason it should remain under its current classification. “Severe and unremitting pain is

a major cause of morbidity in those suffering from human immunodeficiency virus–

acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (HIV-AIDS). Although anecdotal reports from the

AIDS community have proclaimed the efficacy of smoked marijuana, it was not until

2007 (the long delay in performing adequate studies is discussed in Part V) that these

claims were clearly verified when the efficacy of smoked marijuana in treating such pain

was reported in a scientific peer-reviewed publication by Donald Abrams and

coworkers.”(4.) Hopefully, in the time coming, there will be a reform on this drug and

the people around the United States will be able to accept a new classification, so that

we can reap the benefits of medicinal marijuana.

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(1.) "NORML.org - Working to Reform Marijuana Laws." Medical Use. N.p., n.d. Web. 28 Sept.

2015.

(2.)"DEA / Drug Scheduling." DEA / Drug Scheduling. N.p., n.d. Web. 28 Sept. 2015.

(3.)"Medical Marijuana and the Law." The New England Journal of Medicine. N.p., 22 Apr. 2010.

Web.

(4.)Medical Marijuana: The Conflict Between Scientific Evidence and Political Ideology. Part Two of

Two." Taylor & Francis. N.p., n.d. Web. 14 Oct. 2015.

(5.)A Longitudinal Study of Marijuana Effects." Taylor & Francis. N.p., 03 July 2009. Web. 13 Oct.

2015.

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