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Archive for the ‘marijuana’


Medical Marijuana and The Commonwealth of Pennsylvania

Some pretty cool is happening here in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.  A House panel held a public hearing yesterday to discuss a bill that would allow the residents of The Commonwealth to use medical marijuana.  And that is very cool.  Of course there were protestors on both sides.  The Pros talking about the relief that marijuana can give to patients suffering from cancer, glaucoma, HIV or other physically painful diseases.  Along with the Cons talking about marijuana addiction.  A few years back this would never have happend. 

 

This is a historic day in The Commonwealth.

Medical Marijuana Bill to be introduced in Pennsylvania

I got this announcement from Derek Rosenzweig of Philly Norml last night:

I’m writing to you tonight to give you some excellent news! I have just heard from the sponsor of our bill, PA State Rep. Mark Cohen, that our bill will be introduced this Wednesday, April 29.

This is great news, and it marks a significant milestone in our fight to give patients the right to use medical marijuana. Currently, the following State Reps. have signed on as co-sponsors:

Delaware County
Greg Vitali
Philadelphia County

Vanessa Brown
Mike McGeehan
John Sabatina
Michael O’Brien

We still need more co-sponsors if this bill is to get past the first committee which hears it – either Health and Human Services, or Judiciary.

About the bill

Patients cannot get arrested for possession or personal cultivation
Patients and caregivers will have cards identifying them as such
Doctors can not lose their license for recommending cannabis in a valid doctor-patient relationship
A comprehensive list of ailments for which smoked, vaporized, or orally consumed cannabis or cannabis extract (hashish or hash oil) is found to be beneficial to the patient by either curing or easing symptoms
A procedure for adding ailments and diseases to that list

This is an important bill for folks in Pennsylvania. Please support it through your assemblymen.

Namaste.

Marijuana Nation

Forgive me for talking some literary license with National Geographics documentary called “Marijuana Nation”. Which is a really great documentary to watch, if you haven’t done so up to this point in time.

By the way, have you met our new Attorney General, Eric Holder? He was making some comments that other day about the raiding of Medical Marijuana Dispensaries. Attorney General Holder basically said that the Drug Enforcement Administration would end its raids on state-approved marijuana dispensaries.

Yep. You read that correctly.

“What the president said during the campaign … will be consistent with what we will be doing here in law enforcement,” he said. “What (Obama) said during the campaign … is now American policy.”

Obama indicated during the presidential campaign that he supported the controlled use of marijuana for medical purposes, saying he saw no difference between medical marijuana and other pain-control drugs.

Maybe there is some hope for us after all.

Namaste.

New Jersey Legislature To Hold Hearing on Medical Marijuana

Being a member of one of the founding families of New Jersey I found this to be very interesting.

New Jersey Legislature To Hold Hearing on Medical Marijuana
Ask your representatives to support A 804 and S 119!

NORML is pleased to announce that Senate Bill 119, which seeks to enact legal protections for authorized medical marijuana patients, will be heard by the senate health committee on Monday, December 15, at 9:30 AM in Room 11 on the 4th floor of the New Jersey State House Annex. Members of the public are encouraged to attend.

This legislation, along with its House companion Assembly Bill 804, will help to ensure that medical marijuana patients in New Jersey will no longer have to fear arrest or prosecution from state law enforcement. However, these bills will only receive serious consideration if your elected officials hear an unmistakable message of support from their constituents.

Please take two minutes of your time today to contact your state Senator and tell them to support medical marijuana. If your Senator sits on the Senate Health, Human Services and Senior Citizens Committee, then it is especially important that they hear from you. For your convenience, a prewritten letter will be sent to your representatives when you enter your zip code below.

Marijuana Nation

National Geographic will be airing an episode called Marijuana Nation on Tuesday, December 2.

Here is an clip from it:

This was espisode is by Lisa Ling, a reporter who has spent years covering the failed Drug War that has been waged by the Federal Governent.

Must see TV for everyone.

Namaste.

Michigan Proposal 1 conundrum

I say that it is a conundrum, but it is really just a confusion. Why? Because since Michigan Proposal 1 passed, there has been little or no talk about it. We know that it will go into law as of December 4th. We know that the framework of how it will be regulated won’t be in place until sometime around April 2009.

But what else is going on? Are the citizens just to sit around and hope that everything is going the way that it should?

I am confused.

Michigan Proposal 1 in hindsight

After a few days of letting it sink in that Proposal 1 did pass, I am ready to talk about it.

First, I am really happy that the voters in Michigan took this important step in aiding their neighbors by giving them an alternative to drugs to help combat pain and suffering. Use of a natural product rather than a man-made one is always preferrable.

Michigan now has 10 days to verify the results of the vote, and then 120 days to put it all into action. My advice to the residents of Michigan?

Don’t screw this up. Proposal 1 still has a group of folks who did not want it to pass, and that group of folks includes people in law enforcement. Do not screw this up.

We, in Pennsylvania are working for what you just voted for. We want to use your success to help our citizens who are suffering. Here is an article written by Derek Rosenzweig:

Smoke Blowing in the Winds of Change
By Derek Rosenzweig, PhillyNORML – 11/5/2008

With the astounding victory this 2008 Election of Barack Obama and Democrats in the House and Senate, the people of the United States have stood up to re-claim the American Dream. For decades the world has seen us as a beacon of hope and opportunity, but the last eight years have marred that image for many. Now the time has come for our country to prioritize and set a new course.

Massachusetts’ and Michigan’s voters had the chance to show where their priorities lie by voting on ballot initiatives which would liberalize marijuana policies. In Massachusetts, citizens voted over 65% to decriminalize possession of an ounce or under of cannabis, making it punishable only by a civil fine of $100. In Michigan, voters decided 60% – 40% to allow sick and dying patients to cultivate and use marijuana under their doctor’s care.

Over the last few months I’ve spoken with dozens of patients throughout Pennsylvania who suffer from ailments including chronic pain from a botched surgery, obsessive compulsive disorder, severe arthritis, HIV/AIDS, PTSD, and other conditions. Some of these patients are on disability and can’t work. All of them are on all sorts of medications, often times to the level that it incapacitates them or simply doesn’t give them the relief they need. Then they take one or two puffs on a joint and it brings them almost immediate relief.

Pennsylvanians have, for the most part, long taken a rational view of how to deal with the problems that we face collectively. Now that we as a nation start to walk in a new direction, we as a Commonwealth must do the same thing. Our citizens – our friends, loved ones, co-workers – deserve the chance to live their lives with dignity and self respect, but for many of the patients I spoke to that simply isn’t the case right now. The condition their medications put them in precludes a normal life. For these people the simple fact that medical marijuana actually helps their lives become bearable makes it an easy choice to use it. From a medical standpoint, marijuana has huge potential as a medicine, it’s safer to use than most pharmaceuticals, and its side effects (ie, the high) are well within tolerance limits.

The problem for them is how are they getting it, and what are the potential consequences of illegally obtaining and using this drug as a medicine. For some, it can mean getting fired from a job (and losing health benefits) for testing positive on a urine test, and for others it could mean they’re severely unlucky and get arrested. Depending what they get caught with they could be in jail for 30 days or 5 years. Some ailments require a large amount of cannabis to effectively treat, and under our current laws that amounts to a potential death sentence. We have to be better than this.

That’s why it’s so important that this Commonwealth takes the advice of the voters in Michigan and allows our friends, loved ones, and co-workers to use marijuana as medicine under the care of their doctor. Thirteen states – over 25% of our nations’ citizens – now have the right to use cannabis under state law, and President-elect Obama has publicly stated numerous times that those patients in medical-marijuana states will not have to fear Federal interference during his administration. Until the Federal government changes marijuana’s status as a Schedule 1 drug, Pennsylvania must create its own system of legal cultivation and distribution so that doctors can legally – and without worry of losing their license – prescribe or recommend cannabis to a patient. Pennsylvanians for Medical Marijuana, along with PhillyNORML and the Marijuana Policy Project, are working together to introduce a bill in the General Assembly which would do just that. It’s the least we can do to show where our priorities lie.

Comment at our online forum at http://www.phillynorml.org/forum/index.php?action=post;topic=548

- Derek Rosenzweig

Michigan votes Yes on Proposal 1

Michigan voters, according to The Detroit Free Press, have voted yes on Michigans Medical Marijuana Proposal 1. This makes it legal for patients suffering from cancer, glaucoma, HIV/AIDS and other conditions can be authorized to cultivate, possess and use marijuana without fear of prosecution under state law.

This does not eliminate the fact that the Federal Government stills views marijuana as a dangerous drug, and people possessing it can be arrested and jailed under Federal law.

That all being said: Good job, Michigan. You took a huge step forward in helping people manage their pain and suffering without putting billions of dollars in the big pharma companies.

You did good this time.

namaste.

Where is the Proof that Medical Marijuana Helps?

Ok folks, here is your chance. I just received a comment from someone who wants to know where the proof is?

Who has proof the medical marijuana works? Who of you has used it, or knows someone who uses it and gets relief from pain. I need you comments now. There are only 5 days left to change minds. Si let us get to it.

Leave your comments now.

namaste.

Sarah Palin rolls one for the road

Palin’s Pot Problem
Why should other Alaskans be arrested for something Sarah Palin once did with impunity?

Jacob Sullum | September 17, 2008

When it comes to questions about youthful marijuana use, Sarah Palin is no Slick Willie. “I can’t claim a Bill Clinton and say that I never inhaled,” the Republican vice presidential candidate told the Anchorage Daily News in 2006, before she was elected governor of Alaska.

Although Palin’s handling of the issue scores higher on the candor meter than Clinton’s, she has the same difficulty reconciling her personal experience with her policy positions, a problem also shared by former pot smoker Barack Obama. None of them has a persuasive answer to the question of why other Americans should be arrested for something they did with impunity.

Pot smokers who are arrested do not typically spend much time in jail. But as a 2007 report from the Center for Cognitive Liberty & Ethics noted, they pay a substantial cost that includes not only public humiliation and legal expenses but collateral sanctions such as “revocation or suspension of professional licenses, barriers to employment or promotion, loss of educational aid, driver’s license suspension, and bars on adoption, voting and jury service.”

According to figures released by the FBI this week, about 873,000 people were arrested on marijuana charges in the United States last year, a new record. Pot busts accounted for nearly half of the 1.8 million drug arrests; as usual, the vast majority, about 775,000, were for simple possession, as opposed to cultivation or sale.

This is the fifth year in a row that marijuana arrests have increased, but the upward trend began in the early 1990s. Three times as many people were arrested on marijuana charges last year as in 1991.

The increase in arrests does not correspond to an increase in use; instead, the chance that any given pot smoker will be busted (though still small) is much higher than it was two decades ago. It is also higher than when Palin attended college in the ’80s, which is presumably when she tried marijuana.

By way of extenuation, the Anchorage Daily News reported, Palin noted that marijuana “was legal under state law,” although “illegal under U.S. law.” In 1975 the Alaska Supreme Court ruled that the state constitution, which says the “right of the people to privacy is recognized and shall not be infringed,” prohibits the government from punishing people for possessing small amounts of marijuana in their homes.

A 1990 ballot initiative ostensibly recriminalized all marijuana possession, but in 2003 the Alaska Court of Appeals ruled that “a statute which purports to attach criminal penalties to constitutionally protected conduct is void.” The following year, the Alaska Supreme Court declined to hear the state’s appeal of that decision.

In 2006 the state legislature, at the urging of Palin’s predecessor, Frank Murkowski, passed another law that supposedly made private possession of marijuana for personal use a crime. A judge found that law unconstitutional as well, and the Alaska Supreme Court is considering an appeal of her ruling.

The upshot is that smoking marijuana in the privacy of one’s home is just as legal in Alaska today as it was when Palin did it. Evidently she regrets this situation.

As mayor of Wasilla in 2000, Palin championed a city council resolution opposing a ballot initiative that would have legalized marijuana for adults. Last March her administration asked the Alaska Supreme Court to reverse its 1975 decision shielding private marijuana use, arguing that the drug is more dangerous than it used to be.

In other words, Palin got to smoke pot without worrying about legal consequences and now wants to deny that assurance to fellow Alaskans doing exactly the same thing. “Palin doesn’t support legalizing marijuana,” the Anchorage Daily News reported in 2006, because she worries about “the message it would send to her four kids.”

It’s Palin’s job to teach her children that certain pleasures are reserved for grownups. The government should not continue to arrest adults who are harming no one simply because her children are easily confused.

© Copyright 2008 by Creators Syndicate Inc.