Dogs on the mind

Sometimes, you can't fight off the sadness.

I'm at the Tiger's Tale in Montgomery for a holiday get-together and I find myself talking with my friend Charles about dogs — about our plan to adopt a pup (or two) in January, and the dogs we lost.

The conversation reminds me just how much I still miss my dog Honey, and how much after so many years our big hairy mutt, Benny, remains a presence.

Dogs dig in and take over the heart.

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Let’s hope Lawrence makes the leap

Lawrence may — just may — take a rather historic leap into public financing of local elections.

The proposal, which has been kicking around for about two years, now has the support of a sharply divide local panel charged with studying public financing.

The panel found that

7,000 of the township’s 19,000 registered voters belong to the Democratic or Republican parties. The nominees for the Township Council are chosen from the ranks of registered Democrats and Republicans, generally without primary election challenges.

“It would be desirable to broaden the choice of nominees, but without party support, the raising of campaign funds is difficult,” the report said. “If public funds were available, it might broaden interest in running for office, and the candidates would not be beholden to a political party or private donors.”

An analysis of the 2007 Township Council election revealed the six candidates spent $56,425, which amounts to $1.47 per household per year, the report said. There are 12,554 properties in Lawrence that are assessed for tax purposes.

“This is certainly within reason and without significant effect on the township budget, even in these recessionary times,” the report said. “It may be beneficial when political contributors no longer have to buy ‘no-bid’ contracts with their contributions. Competitive bidding may well save more than public financing of the election costs.”

The report also found that the four states with so-called clean elections laws, “the majority of candidates participated.”

“We conclude that public funding has shown itself to be feasible and beneficial in other places. It is affordable in the township, and the voters should be given the opportunity to act on it,” the report concluded.

Will they? Hard to say. The eight-member committee was split on the issue and it is now up to the Township Council. I’m hoping they endorse the idea and let Lawrence lead the way on reform.

The Star-Ledger backs me up on medical marijuana

I posted Monday on legislation that would legalize so-called “medical marijuana,” saying that

In a humane world, medical marijuana — i.e., the use of pot to mitigate certain debilitating conditions — would be accepted as a matter of course, a normal part of treatment.

It’s nice to see The Star-Ledger, in an editorial today, come to the same conclusion.

This is a good bill, one with stringent safeguards to ensure that the use of marijuana is restricted to legitimate medical patients. Every applicant for a permit would have to prove a bona fide relationship with a physician who can provide documentation of the medical condition at issue.

The paper adds that the “tangled issue” suffers from a willingness of both sides to cherry-pick scientific arguments, but that the Bush administration — and its allies among antidrug crusaders — have been using a “heavy-handed approach (that) hasn’t been popular in a lot of states” and that has turned the Office of National Drug Control Policy into “a sort of campaign office for the anti-legalization crusade.”

One handout, for example, questions whether marijuana is an effective medication, yet concedes that “smoking marijuana may allow patients to temporarily feel better.”

Isn’t that the purpose of an analgesic? If the feds know of any pain reliever that makes people feel better permanently, they should put this miracle drug on the market. In the interim, that argument supports the use of medicinal marijuana.

The other main objection from the Office of National Drug Control Policy is that smoking marijuana “increases the risk for respiratory diseases similar to those associated with nicotine cigarettes.” This argument would make sense if the federal government banned cigarettes. But it’s absurd to argue that a healthy citizen may fill his lungs freely with cigarette smoke until he develops cancer, yet be precluded from a few puffs that deliver a drug to soften the side effects of chemotherapy.

The hypocrisy would be maddening if it weren’t the kind of thing that we see all the time in public debates over controversial issues.

I am an advocate of harm reduction and legalization of drugs — heavily regulate them from their very beginnings as seeds or in the manufacturing process, through packaging and distribution and tax them heavily to generate cash to offset any negative impacts they may have on society.

That said, I also know the political will is not there and that legalization remains a long way off. Denying a drug that has the potential to alleviate pain and suffering among the sick is just cruel. By passing this legislation, we can take a step toward rectifying this injustice.