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By 1975 over 36 million Americans had tried
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exciting in the entire field of sociology. For examples of sociological lines of attack on the
medical view see Thomas Scheff, Being Mentally Ill (Chicago: Aldine, 1966); R. D.
Laing, The Politics of Experience (New York: Ballantine, 1968); Thomas Szasz, The Myth
of Mental Illness (London: Secker and Warburg, 1962). (It should be noted that both
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The Marijuana Smokers - Chapter 5
Laing and Szasz are themselves physicians.) For the process of the dynamics of
constructing this reality in the patient relationship, see Thomas Scheff, "Negotiating
Reality: Notes on Power in the Assessment of Responsibility," Social Problems 16
(Summer 1968): 3-17. (back)
4. The sword cuts two ways, however. Physicians who have conducted research on
marijuana use may also be employed as rhetorical devices by the pro-pot lobby. In fact the
scientific method may be employed as a rhetorical device for the purpose of convincing
the opposition. As many of the arguments of the antimarijuana side fail to be substantiated
empirically, the scientific rhetoric will tend to be invoked correspondingly less, but will
become increasingly emphasized by the opposition. (back)
5. This concept of the disease or pathology model is precisely equivalent to what Dr.
Norman Zinberg independently calls a "medical model" on marijuana use. (back)
6. American Medical Association, Committee on Alcoholism and Drug Dependence
Council on Mental Health, "The Crutch That Cripples: Drug Dependence," pamphlet
(Chicago: AMA, 1968), p. 2. For some reason, a small but vigorous contingent of
marijuana supporters maintain that the drug may actually be therapeutic. For instance, in
the vast and decidedly promarijuana anthology, The Marihuana Papers, edited by David
Solomon, several articles were included which dealt specifically with marijuana's healing
powers in some regard or another. A physician-psychiatrist, Harry Chramoy Hermon, is
licensed to employ cannabis in his therapy. See Hermon, "Preliminary Observations on
the Use of Marihuana in Psychotherapy," The Marijuana Review , no. 3 (June-August
1969), 14-17. (back)
7. E. D. Mattmiller, "Social Values, American Youth, and Drug Use" (Paper presented
to COTA, January 22, 1968), p. 5 (my emphasis, in part). (back)
8. Brill, op. cit., p. 52. (back)
9. Jerome H. Jaffe, "Drug Addiction and Drug Abuse," in Louis S. Goodman and
Alfred Gilman, eds. The Pharmacological Basis of Therapeutics, 3rd ed. (New York:
Macmillan, 1965), p. 285. (back)
10. Paul Jay Fink Morris J. Goldman, and Irwin Lyons, Recent Trends in Substance
Abuse," The international Journal of the Addictions, 2 (Spring 1967): 150. (back)
11. Graham B. Blaine, Jr., Youth and the Hazards of Affluence (New York: Harper
Colophon, 1967), p. 68. (back)
12. Frank S. Caprio, Variations in Lovemaking (New York: Richlee Publications, 68),
p. 166. (back)
13. Duke Fisher, "Marijuana and Sex" (Paper presented to the National Symposiuthc-seedsgrow-hemp
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