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The things in my head go 'round and 'round

This is my life. You can't have it.

Archive for the ‘my opinion’


Election Day Count Down

Less than 3 weeks until we have the opportunity to exercise our constitutional right to vote for the person of our choice to be President of the United States.

Three weeks until we can vote. Hopefully, by now, you know where your voting precinct is located. If not, please find out so that there won’t be any confusion when you go to vote.

And you are going to vote, aren’t you? We, your fellow citizens, need each of you to vote. No matter who you vote for. Yes, I even want the Republicans to get out and vote. Every person needs to go out an vote.

Please.

See? I am being nice again.

Namaste.

Flint, Michigan Medical Marijuana

Flint, Michigan passed a Medical Marijuana Law back in 2007. This is an article taken from the Flint Journal.

“The city of Flint, MI, voted to allow patients in need to have access to medical marijuana. The Saginaw News reported on March 4, 2007 (“Flint Pot Vote Raises Awareness”) that “By a 1,777-1,101 vote, Flint became the fifth Michigan city to approve legally puffing pot for health reasons. Use remains illegal under state and federal law. Officials reminded Flint residents not to start loading up their hookah pipes — or face the consequences. Other Michigan cities that have approved medical pot-use measures are Ann Arbor, Detroit, Ferndale and Traverse City. Lansing is the next target, says NORML, a pro-marijuana outfit, and the goal is to get a medical dope initiative on the statewide ballot. Medical marijuana use is legal in 11 states.”

According to the News, “Whether marijuana is safer or a more effective painkiller than, say, OxyContin is debatable, but some users think so. Cancer patients who have tried it say pot works best at inducing appetite. It has beneficial uses, and we’re sympathetic to those who use it legally. The biggest fear coming from law enforcement circles is that legalized medical marijuana use could lead to additional abuse and wider recreational use. Yet the abuse of prescription drugs, the International Narcotics Control Board said last week, is about to exceed the use of “practically all illicit drugs with the exception of cannibis.” The board, an offshoot of the United Nations, said the number of Americans abusing prescription drugs nearly doubled between 1992 and 2003, to 15.1 million from 7.8 million people.”

The News noted that “A free and compassionate society ought to understand common sense trumps perceptions of a drug that may be less dangerous than prescriptions. It’s time to take a deep breath — inhale — and place sick people ahead of ideology. The Flint vote and the others before it indicate that more people realize marijuana, like other drugs used properly, is not always evil.”

I find this pretty interesting. Any comments?

Namaste.

Drug War Facts

One of the reasons given by folks who have been asked as to how they are going to vote on Michigans Proposal 1 has been that if marijuana is approved for medical use, it will be abused. Folks will find a way to get hold of it and get high.

I don’t see a down side to that. I found this link when I was looking for facts on the war on drugs. I found it interesting.

I can’t think of the down side to having folks being able to fire one up. Maybe fewer drunks on the road. Obesity might go up from ice cream and dorito consumption.

Just thought that I would toss that out there.

Namaste.

John McCain Can’t Control His Crowds

Almost sounds like he can’t control his bowels, doesn’t it?

I ran across this article in the Detroit Free Press.  The article was written by ROCHELLE RILEY and it very interensting.  Let me know what you think?

Namaste.

NRA supports McCain

Now there is a no-brainer, isn’t it?  According to the Associated Press, despite serious differences on gun show rules, and campaign finance, the NRA is supporting the Republican nominee.

Has the NRA NOT ever supported the Republican nominee?  Ever?

I don’t thinkso.

And it makes it even sweeter with Governor Palin being a card carrying member of the NRA.  Isn’t that special?

“She’s a hunter, she’s a Second Amendment supporter and she’s a tremendous asset to the ticket,” he said.

Palin, an NRA member, received an A-plus rating from the group when she ran for governor in 2006. That compares to an NRA grade in the average range for McCain in his last Senate race. McCain isn’t an NRA member.

Palin has been an NRA booster, particularly for its education and safety programs, during her career in government. As mayor of Wasilla, Alaska, she used $750 from her city campaign fund to upgrade her NRA membership.”

Isn’t that nice?

And have you see this?

McCain Rage.

Makes things a little bit more interesting, now doesn’t it?

Namaste.

The Palin Debate Flowchart

I saw the Palin Debat Flowchart on The Daily Dish, a blog by columnist Andrew Sullivan.

Unfortunately, I am not able to post it here so you will have to go visit The Daily Dish to look at it.

Seems like a pretty good indicator of what went on Thursday night.

Namaste.

Sarah Palin’s Alternate Universe

Palin’s Alternate Universe

As posted in the New York Times:

By BOB HERBERT
Published: October 3, 2008

“Sarah Palin is the perfect exclamation point to the Bush years.

We’ve lived through nearly two terms of an administration that believed it could create its own reality:

“Deficits don’t matter.” “Brownie, you’re doing a heckuva job.” “Those weapons of mass destruction must be somewhere.”

Now comes Ms. Palin, a smiling, bubbly vice-presidential candidate who travels in an alternate language universe. For Ms. Palin, such things as context, syntax and the proximity of answers to questions have no meaning.

In her closing remarks at the vice-presidential debate Thursday night, Ms. Palin referred earnestly, if loosely, to a quote from Ronald Reagan. He had warned that if Americans weren’t vigilant in protecting their freedom, they would find themselves spending their “sunset years telling our children and our children’s children what it was like in America when men were free.”

What Ms. Palin didn’t say was that the menace to freedom that Reagan was talking about was Medicare. As the historian Robert Dallek has pointed out, Reagan “saw Medicare as the advance wave of socialism, which would ‘invade every area of freedom in this country.’ ”

Does Ms. Palin agree with that Looney Tunes notion? Or was this just another case of the aw-shucks, darn-right, I’m-just-a-hockey-mom governor of Alaska mouthing something completely devoid of meaning?

Here’s Ms. Palin during the debate: “Say it ain’t so, Joe! There you go pointing backwards again … Now, doggone it, let’s look ahead and tell Americans what we have to plan to do for them in the future. You mentioned education, and I’m glad you did. I know education you are passionate about with your wife being a teacher for 30 years, and God bless her. Her reward is in heaven, right?”

If Governor Palin didn’t like a question, or didn’t know the answer, she responded as though some other question had been asked. She made no bones about this, saying early in the debate: “I may not answer the questions the way that either the moderator or you want to hear.”

The problem with Ms. Palin’s candidacy is that John McCain might actually win this election, and then if something terrible happened, the country could be left with little more than an exclamation point as president.

After Ms. Palin had woven one of her particularly impenetrable linguistic webs, Joe Biden turned to the debate’s moderator, Gwen Ifill, and said: “Gwen, I don’t know where to start.”

Of course he didn’t know where to start because Ms. Palin’s words don’t mean anything. She’s all punctuation.

This is such a serious moment in American history that it’s hard to believe that someone with Ms. Palin’s limited skills could possibly be playing a leadership role. On the day before the debate, the commander of NATO forces in Afghanistan, Gen. David McKiernan, made an urgent appeal for more troops, saying the additional “boots on the ground,” as well as more helicopters and other vital equipment, were “needed as quickly as possible.”

The morning after the debate, the Labor Department announced that the employment situation in the U.S. had deteriorated even more than experts had expected. The nation lost nearly 160,000 jobs in September, more than double the monthly losses in July and August.

Conditions are probably worse than even those numbers indicate because the government’s statistics do not yet reflect the response of employers to the credit crisis that has taken such a hold in the last few weeks.

Where is the evidence that Governor Palin even understands these complex and enormously challenging problems? During the debate she twice referred to General McKiernan as “McClellan.” Neither Ms. Ifill nor Senator Biden corrected her.

But after Senator Biden suggested that John McCain’s answer to the nation’s energy problems was to “drill, drill, drill,” Ms. Palin promptly pointed out, as if scoring a point, that “the chant is ‘Drill, baby, drill!’ ”

How’s that for perspective? The credit markets are frozen. Our top general in Afghanistan is dialing 911. Americans are losing jobs by the scores of thousands. And Sarah Palin is making sure we know that the chant is “drill, baby, drill!” not “drill, drill, drill.”

John McCain has spent most of his adult life speaking of his love for his country. Maybe he sees something in Sarah Palin that most Americans do not. Maybe he is aware of qualities that lead him to believe she’d be as steady as Franklin Roosevelt in guiding the U.S. through a prolonged economic downturn. Maybe she’d be as wise and prudent in a national emergency as John Kennedy was during the Cuban missile crisis.

Maybe Senator McCain has reason to believe that it would not be the most colossal of errors to put Ms. Palin a heartbeat away from the presidency.

He’s got just four weeks to share that insight with the rest of us.”

He isn’t going to convince me. There is no way in this world that I would vote for McCain, and Palin. Just the thought of another 4 years of a republican president gives me the chills. As if the last 8 years weren’t bad enough. Now the amount of work that will be required to get this country back on the road to recovery is so huge, the next president will have to hit the ground running. And it is doubtful that 4 years will make a dent in all of the mistakes that have to be corrected.

Namaste.

Now some opposition to Michigan Proposal 1

According to October 2nd’s Detroit Free Press “A ballot proposal to legalize the cultivation and use of marijuana for medical purposes in Michigan, which has gone virtually unchallenged for more than a year, is to have some organized opposition after all.

A coalition of medical, law enforcement and antidrug organizations calling itself Citizens Protecting Michigan Kids has scheduled news conferences across lower Michigan today to kick off the campaign to encourage a vote against Proposal 1.”

Now it seems, we have a horse race. I was thinking that it was going along too easily. Now, the voters of Michigan have to get off of their butts and put their vote where their mouth is.

Namaste.

What states have medical marijuana laws

Since I have been writing about Michigans Medical Marijuana proposal I started looking into what states around it had laws on the books.

Lets start with Pennsylvania. Nope, nothing here. Nothing on the books. The cupboard is bare in Harrisburg.

Ohio? Yep, they are looking for sponsers for a bill. Hopefully they will find some so that they can get it before the voters.

New Jersey? The Drug Policy Alliance New Jersey is leading the lobbying effort to pass this important legislation. They have garnered the support of the New Jersey State Nurses Association, the New Jersey Academy of Family Physicians, the New Jersey Hospice and Palliative Care Organization, the New Jersey League for Nursing, the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society’s southern and northern New Jersey chapters, and many other organizations. With this impressive level of support, MPP is hopeful that seriously ill New Jersey residents will soon get the protection they deserve.

There is no reason for New Jersey’s legislators to stall any longer. Polls and common knowledge both show that medical marijuana is not a controversial issue. Gov. Jon Corzine (D) has even said he would sign the bill into law if it got to his desk.

Ohio? “In a previous legislative session, the Ohio Medical Marijuana Act (OMMA), got as far as the Senate Criminal Justice committee. The Criminal Justice committee held the legally required sponsor hearing but it did not pass any farther.

Now the Ohio Medical Compassion Act SB 343 is waiting to be heard in committee We have a two sponsors in the in the Senate (Senator tim Roberts and Dale Miller). Please ask your legislators to consider cosponsoring the bill and to contact the appropriate sponsor for more information.”

Indiana? During the 2008 session, not one legislator stepped forward on behalf of Indiana’s seriously ill to introduce a medical marijuana bill. And just for the sake of clarity? Do not get caught in Indiana with any weed or paraphanalia. Or you will become a resident of their penal system. Indiana does not fool around.

And Illinois weighs in with lot of progress was made this legislative session with the Compassionate Use of Medical Marijuana Pilot Program bill. SB 2865 picked up three new co-sponsors this year, and the bill’s lead sponsor, Sen. John Cullerton (D-Chicago), sat down with law enforcement to listen to their concerns and then amended the bill to address those concerns.

SB 2865 passed the Senate Public Health Committee with a 6-4 vote and is now awaiting a vote on the Senate floor, which must take place by January 13, 2009 per legislative rule.

HB 5938 was re-referred back to the rules committee and now must be moved out of that committee in order to receive a floor vote.

Michigan is being watched very closely by her neighbors. What happens in the Great Lakes State, most likely will influence the states around her.

Hmmm.

Namaste.

The folks in Illinois are interested in Michigan Proposal 1

Maybe it is ex-patriots from the ‘Gan-land. Checking out the hits again, most are coming from the Detroit area. What is up with that? No folks with maladies that could benefit from Medical Marijuana on the West coast? I think not. I can surmise a few communities that have plenty of folks who could benefit.

South Haven with its good sized population of Senior Citizens. Including my Mother. Though the thought of her blazing one to take the edge off of her neck pain sends a shiver up my spine. Head up the Lake Michigan shore and head into pretty much any lakeside community and you are going to hit folks with cancer, and with aids. They definitely could benefit from not having to use morphine, and oxy to help ease their pain.

But the majority of hits are coming from around Detroit. Go figure.

namaste.