What's new
  • Happy Birthday ICMag! Been 20 years since Gypsy Nirvana created the forum! We are celebrating with a 4/20 Giveaway and by launching a new Patreon tier called "420club". You can read more here.
  • Important notice: ICMag's T.O.U. has been updated. Please review it here. For your convenience, it is also available in the main forum menu, under 'Quick Links"!

Government-sponsored study destroys DEA’s classification of marijuana

Bi0hazard

Active member
Veteran
Government-sponsored study destroys DEA’s classification of marijuana

Full Article @ http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2012/07/...ification-of-marijuana/#.UDND0dICKEI.facebook

A government-sponsored study published recently in The Open Neurology Journal concludes that marijuana provides much-needed relief to some chronic pain sufferers and that more clinical trials are desperately needed, utterly destroying the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency’s (DEA) classification of the drug as having no medical uses.

While numerous prior studies have shown marijuana’s usefulness for a host of medical conditions, none have ever gone directly at the DEA’s placement of marijuana atop the schedule of controlled substances. This study, sponsored by the State of California and conducted at the University of California Center for Medicinal Cannabis Research, does precisely that, driving a stake into the heart of America’s continued war on marijuana users by calling the Schedule I placement simply “not accurate” and “not tenable.”

Reacting to the study, Paul Armentano, director of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws (NORML), told Raw Story that the study clearly proves U.S. drug policy “is neither based upon nor guided by science.”

“In fact, it is hostile to science,” he said. “And despite the Obama Administration’s well publicized 2009 memo stating, ‘Science and the scientific process must inform and guide decisions of my Administration,’ there is little to no evidence indicating that the federal government’s ‘See no evil; hear no evil’ approach to cannabis policy is not changing any time soon.”
Schedule I is supposedly reserved for the most inebriating substances that the DEA believes have no medical value, including LSD, ecstasy, peyote and heroin.* As the DEA describes it: “Drugs listed in schedule I have no currently accepted medical use in treatment in the United States and, therefore, may not be prescribed, administered, or dispensed for medical use. In contrast, drugs listed in schedules II-V have some accepted medical use and may be prescribed, administered, or dispensed for medical use.”
And that’s the problem, the study’s authors portend.

“The classification of marijuana as a Schedule I drug as well as the continuing controversy as to whether or not cannabis is of medical value are obstacles to medical progress in this area,” they wrote. “Based on evidence currently available the Schedule I classification is not tenable; it is not accurate that cannabis has no medical value, or that information on safety is lacking. It is true cannabis has some abuse potential, but its profile more closely resembles drugs in Schedule III (where codeine and dronabinol are listed). The continuing conflict between scientific evidence and political ideology will hopefully be reconciled in a judicious manner.”

They add that their evidence showed marijuana reliably reduced chronic neuropathic pain and muscle spasticity due to multiple sclerosis versus trials where a placebo was used. They also specifically tested marijuana’s effects when smoked, calling the delivery method “rapid and efficient” but noting that vaporization is a better choice because it produces less carbon monoxide.

The study adds that, like all medicines, there are negative side effects associated with marijuana, such as dizziness, fatigue, lightheadedness, muscle weakness and pain and heart palpitations — all of which can pose a risk in some chronic pain patients with co-occurring conditions like cardiovascular disease or substance abuse disorders. However, they call these side effects “dose-related” and “of mild to moderate severity,” adding that they “appear to decline over time, and are reported less frequently in experienced than in naïve users.” Researchers also noted that “fatal overdose with cannabis alone has not been reported.”

Authors additionally found that marijuana does cause withdrawal symptoms within 12 hours of use, noting the symptoms are mild in experienced users and typically abate within 72 hours. They added that ingesting marijuana “can acutely impair skills required to drive motor vehicles,” but noted that the data on marijuana and traffic accidents is “inconclusive.”
Ultimately, they concluded that more clinical trials are needed to determine which individual components of the marijuana plant are causing the medicinal effects, and whether the plant can be used to treat a host of other ailments.

“Medical marijuana is mostly used for chronic pain, and has enabled countless patients to either reduce or eliminate their pharmaceutical drug regimen,” Kris Hermes, a spokesman for Americans for Safe Access (ASA), one of the nation’s leading medical marijuana advocacy groups, told Raw Story. “However, it can also be used for: arthritis, nausea or as an appetite stimulant for people living with HIV/AIDS or cancer, gastrointestinal disorders, and movement disorders (not just for people with multiple sclerosis). That is only a sampling of health conditions for which cannabis has been found helpful in alleviating symptoms. Other health conditions include: [post-traumatic stress disorder], [attention deficit disorder], [attention deficit hyperactivity disorder] and other mental health conditions, glaucoma, and migraines.”

In hopes of forcing recognition of marijuana’s medical value, ASA sued the federal government last year after a long-running appeal for the reclassification of marijuana was shot down nearly a decade after it was filed. That case should go before the U.S. Court of Appeals District of Columbia Circuit later this year.

“The federal government’s strategy has been delay, delay, delay,” ASA chief counsel Joe Elford said in an advisory. “It is far past time for the government to answer our rescheduling petition, but unfortunately we’ve been forced to go to court in order to get resolution.”

“Reform advocates can and should use this study to show their congressional representatives that our country’s leading medical marijuana researchers agree that it should be reclassified,” Hermes added. “…This certainly should also have a bearing on the D.C. Circuit’s deliberations in the appeal of the rescheduling petition denial.”
 
S

SeaMaiden

I call it "The Body of Evidence." Which needs to be more than anecdotal. Thus, the need for more research, and it's happening. The body will become a wave. A tidal wave, a tsunami of evidence.

I love stuff like this, truly. SCIENCE!
 

MIway

Registered User
Veteran
go sign the petition to reschedule everyone.

Wonder where it will get reclassified? Perhaps mandating a prescription (not a recommendation) from a doctor...? How will that play out?

Don't get me wrong... I'm for getting out of the wod... But we need legalization, not reclassification alone. Even that has problems... Either big pharma or big tobacco... As it would appear. Kinda giving up on the cottage industry model, just don't feel it will play out against the money.
 

Blue Socks

Member
This is good news for sure but I suspect this is only leading us down the road where you will have to get your prescription cannabis derived drugs from a pharmacy and we are still not allowed to grow our own on our own property. There is too much money at stake for these yahoos to just give up the fight and let us be free like we should be. But with that said any signs of change in the scheduling of cannabis is always a good thing
 

Growcephus

Member
Veteran
Didn't they destroy that classification in the 70's with a government study and they still said screw it?

As I understand it, EVERY study conducted on cannabis by even quasi-impartial sources concluded that cannabis should NOT be a criminalized drug. This is true for studies done from 1937 till today.

And.....

EVERY single government administration has ignored them.
 

VirginHarvester

Active member
Veteran
This is good news for sure but I suspect this is only leading us down the road where you will have to get your prescription cannabis derived drugs from a pharmacy and we are still not allowed to grow our own on our own property. There is too much money at stake for these yahoos to just give up the fight and let us be free like we should be. But with that said any signs of change in the scheduling of cannabis is always a good thing

So true Blue Socks. They were trying to keep it illegal for a reason, and not because "it's a gateway drug" or to protect children. It was about control, money, power, greed.

Keeping Cannabis illegal helped a lot of people make money off the drug trade(DEA officials/informants imho), and has kept a lot of people employed by imprisoning and rehabilitating marijuana users. I remember a thread recently which suggested 10% of prisoners in the state of Florida are small time marijuana crimes. That could be tens of thousands in Florida imprisoned in part thanks to laws against cannabis. It's barbaric.

We'll see what happens but fortunately(or unfortunately) this country is about to be so overwhelmed with calamities that far outweigh unwarranted fears of cannabis that for a lack of money, and concern for basic security, people will not tolerate, nor will government likely have the wherewithal, to continue filling court systems and jails with cannabis users.
 

Arthritis_sucks

The Dude
Veteran
Wonder where it will get reclassified? Perhaps mandating a prescription (not a recommendation) from a doctor...? How will that play out?

Don't get me wrong... I'm for getting out of the wod... But we need legalization, not reclassification alone. Even that has problems... Either big pharma or big tobacco... As it would appear. Kinda giving up on the cottage industry model, just don't feel it will play out against the money.

you can not have legalization without reclassification first period. We must first work at the federal level by doing so. Big pharma is the head of these goons(feds) that do their dirty work, an this is the only way to put them in check an outta our grow rooms. Baby steps, but the right ones to get where we need to be.
 

Arthritis_sucks

The Dude
Veteran
I call it "The Body of Evidence." Which needs to be more than anecdotal. Thus, the need for more research, and it's happening. The body will become a wave. A tidal wave, a tsunami of evidence.

I love stuff like this, truly. SCIENCE!
YESSSS!we need to flood them with evidence
 

dank.frank

ef.yu.se.ka.e.em
ICMag Donor
Veteran
Yep....all in preparation of big pharma take over...handed over on a silver tray by our government that has made us criminals for the past 5 decades. Like every thing else these days...okay for the monopoly, but illegal for the multitudes....



dank.Frank
 

VirginHarvester

Active member
Veteran
Could they really hand MMJ over to pharma companies? What would they tell the public, their marijuana is good, street/imported/homegrown MMJ is bad?

On one hand I can't imagine, on the other, I can and think "wow".
 

yesum

Well-known member
ICMag Donor
Veteran
As I understand it, EVERY study conducted on cannabis by even quasi-impartial sources concluded that cannabis should NOT be a criminalized drug. This is true for studies done from 1937 till today.

And.....

EVERY single government administration has ignored them.

LaGuardia report from 40's comes to mind. Ignored.

DEA missed their calling, being in the Gestapo under Hitler would have been heaven for these assholes.:greenstars:
 

GMT

The Tri Guy
Veteran
try selling home made asprins, see how quickly you end up in hot water. Once big pharma has the grip on the prescription trade, that's what private growers and caregivers will effectively be doing in the eyes of the law. You may even get sued for breaching someones patent if you use it for medical purposes without it coming from the patent holders pet manufacturer.
 

dank.frank

ef.yu.se.ka.e.em
ICMag Donor
Veteran
Could they really hand MMJ over to pharma companies? What would they tell the public, their marijuana is good, street/imported/homegrown MMJ is bad?

On one hand I can't imagine, on the other, I can and think "wow".

Oxycodone vs. Herion

It's the same construct....

This is not stating support of herion, but rather saying it has happened with other drugs....why not cannabis...



dank.Frank
 
S

SeaMaiden

Wonder where it will get reclassified? Perhaps mandating a prescription (not a recommendation) from a doctor...? How will that play out?

Don't get me wrong... I'm for getting out of the wod... But we need legalization, not reclassification alone. Even that has problems... Either big pharma or big tobacco... As it would appear. Kinda giving up on the cottage industry model, just don't feel it will play out against the money.

This is good news for sure but I suspect this is only leading us down the road where you will have to get your prescription cannabis derived drugs from a pharmacy and we are still not allowed to grow our own on our own property. There is too much money at stake for these yahoos to just give up the fight and let us be free like we should be. But with that said any signs of change in the scheduling of cannabis is always a good thing

I agree with you, but the only way that we will be able to gain acceptance by the general public is by more studies like this. And I don't know about you folks, but I'm tired of being marginalized and people frowning upon me as though they're better for smoking cheap ciggies and drinking booze and popping pills. I'm fucking TIRED OF IT. And for me, I don't run away, I take that bull(shit) by the horns as best I can and wrangle with it. I very well likely may lose, but then again, what will I win if I don't even try?

Oh! Oh! Did you smell that? I just caught a whiff of my girls on the breeze.
 

mr.brunch

Well-known member
Veteran
I agree with you, but the only way that we will be able to gain acceptance by the general public is by more studies like this. And I don't know about you folks, but I'm tired of being marginalized and people frowning upon me as though they're better for smoking cheap ciggies and drinking booze and popping pills. I'm fucking TIRED OF IT. And for me, I don't run away, I take that bull(shit) by the horns as best I can and wrangle with it. I very well likely may lose, but then again, what will I win if I don't even try?

Oh! Oh! Did you smell that? I just caught a whiff of my girls on the breeze.

im with you there. 100%.
 

Billy Murphy

New member
I agree with you, but the only way that we will be able to gain acceptance by the general public is by more studies like this. And I don't know about you folks, but I'm tired of being marginalized and people frowning upon me as though they're better for smoking cheap ciggies and drinking booze and popping pills. I'm fucking TIRED OF IT. And for me, I don't run away, I take that bull(shit) by the horns as best I can and wrangle with it. I very well likely may lose, but then again, what will I win if I don't even try?

Oh! Oh! Did you smell that? I just caught a whiff of my girls on the breeze.
Yes, yes, and one more time, yes - 100%!
______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Biohazard, Peaceful warrior.

My daily hobby and job is to do assignment writing service for money; where I do it - here;
https://edubirdie.com/assignment-writing-service.

Weed enthusiast since 2004.
“A buddy with weed is a buddy indeed, and a buddy who shares is a buddy who cares about you.”
 
Last edited:
Top