Polling Analysis - Conclusions
"Nothing so directly threatens the stability of the State,
then, as the present marijuana laws, yet the State persists in the
suicidal course of trying to enforce them." Charles A.
Reich, The Greening of America, 1970.
|
What Does this Study Conclude?
What will history say about a country that touts its democracy, but
pursues a policy counter to the will of over two-thirds of its people?
How will our children reconcile that, in their name, we made the
victims of this policy the "least among us:" the weak, the
sick, and the dying? How far are we as a nation willing to go to keep
them from using unapproved medicines? Should the United States
government continue its war on medical marijuana? The therapeutic use
of cannabis represents one of the great political, social and moral
issues of our time, and the answers to the questions posed by it are
clear in the public mind.
By resounding margins, the public supports the medical use of
marijuana. By and large, it sees the medicinal benefit of the plant
and follows health issues surrounding it closely. The public’s
support for it has grown significantly over the past six years, and
appears to be even stronger since September 11, 2001. Fundamentally,
the public does not want medical marijuana patients
arrested and sent to prison, and it does not support the efforts of
the Bush Administration to shut down the California patient
cooperatives. It can accept marijuana’s use as medicine without
immediate FDA approval.
The gravity of this problem can be seen in the estimated number of
arrests involving the medicinal use of marijuana: nearly 250,000 in
the last ten years. Understanding the injustice behind this number,
numerous states have passed legislation recognizing marijuana’s
potential as medicine, and voters in eight states have approved ballot
initiatives legalizing its medicinal use. The Federal government,
though, has thwarted implementation of these laws.
The shift of voter registrations away from the major parties
coupled with the strength of support for the issue indicates that the
public is looking for a political solution to this problem. With an
overwhelming majority of their members backing medicinal cannabis,
either of the two major parties is in a position to take the lead on
it. The party that endorses this issue stands to not only unify their
own party, but also attract a substantial number of opposing party
members and independents who also feel strongly about it. However, if
both major political parties continue on the previous course of
medical marijuana prohibition, third parties will seize this issue and
its overwhelming public support, thereby accelerating the decline in
overall party registrations. Essentially, the major parties have much
to gain by endorsing the medicinal use of marijuana, but also much to
lose if they do not.
Americans are a kind and generous people, with a legacy of caring
for the "least among us." Through their answers on these
polls they are making it clear that they want to perpetuate this
tradition and will vote their consciences to do so. The public has
spoken on the issue of medical marijuana. The next time politicians
are approached by their aides or constituents about it, hopefully
silence will no longer follow.
|