[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 57 (Thursday, April 14, 2016)]
[House]
[Pages H1683-H1684]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
MARIJUANA DEBATE
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
[[Page H1684]]
Oregon (Mr. Blumenauer) for 5 minutes.
Mr. BLUMENAUER. Mr. Speaker, as we struggle to deal with the epidemic
of opioid addiction and thousands of deaths from overdose, it is ironic
that later this afternoon I will be part of a debate at the Brookings
Institution about whether or not marijuana should continue to be a
Schedule I controlled substance because, according to the statute, it
has no medical value and a high potential for abuse.
Well, as part of the national drug reform movement, this much is
clear: marijuana is less addictive, by far, than tobacco, alcohol, and
cocaine. Indeed, the percentage of people who become addicted is less
than 9 percent, as opposed to alcohol, cocaine, and tobacco, which is
much, much higher.
It carries this designation of Schedule I despite the fact that
millions of people have used marijuana and there has never been a
single documented case of an overdose death.
As to medical value, it has repeatedly been confirmed. The New
England Journal of Medicine did a survey in 2013 of practitioners who
overwhelmingly supported the use of marijuana for medicinal purposes.
It has been endorsed by 15 State medical associations, the Epilepsy
Foundation, and the American Nurses Association. People who have looked
at it objectively agree that there is a huge potential for benefit. And
that, most compellingly, is borne out by thousands of years of human
existence.
It is used by well over a million Americans in 40 States to deal with
things like PTSD and chronic pain. It is well known that it helps deal
with the debilitating effects of chemotherapy for cancer: nausea and
the loss of appetite. Indeed, we are having families move across the
country to be able to get legal access to medical marijuana in States
like Colorado because it is the only remedy that they have been able to
get to give relief to their infant children who suffer a debilitating
type of epileptic seizures, torturing their babies, and it works for
them.
Well, in the 1970s Richard Nixon rejected the advice of his own
handpicked Commission on Marihuana and Drug Abuse and decided to make
this the centerpiece of his war on drugs. A trillion dollars later and
after millions of lives being affected, we are on the verge of a
national effort to right this wrong. We are going to see State after
State voting to follow Oregon, Colorado, Washington, and Alaska in
adult legalization.
It is time for Congress and the administration to reassess the flawed
principle of making marijuana a Schedule I controlled drug, with all
the resulting harms and none of the benefits. It is past time for
action.
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