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The Thin Blue Party Line
Against Medical Marijuana;
Law Enforcement Lies From Alaska And Oregon 2 Op-eds
October 12, 1998 MEDICAL MARIJUANA MEASURE IS ABOUT GREED Ballot Measure No. 8, "Allowing Medical Use of Marijuana," before Alaska
voters in November, would be a bad law. All Alaskans concerned about the future of this
great state should vote no on Ballot Measure No. 8. It creates a large new
"bureaucratic Agency" in the department of Health and Social Services. Ballot measure No. 8 requires a confidential registry of drug user patients. It
requires the state to police the medical use of marijuana. Ballot measure 8 allows the
drug user patient or the caregiver to cultivate, grow, possess and distribute marijuana
for the patient. The patient and/or caregiver may grow and possess the following amounts
of grass. 1. No more than 1 ounce of marijuana in usable form. 2. No More than 6 marijuana
plants, with no more than three mature flowering plants producing usable marijuana at any
time. Basically, the patient drug user is allowed to grow his
own pot. There is absolutely no quality control provisions in Ballot Measure No. 8. The
patients physician would be prescribing "street- grade grass" for an
alleged "debilitating condition. "Debilitating" is so broadly defined in the bill as a medical condition that
it can easily be misused by the patient, caregiver and or the prescribing physician. The psychoactive ingredient in marijuana, tetrahyrocannbinol, is commonly referred to
as THC. Today the THC or psychoactive ingredient in high quality
street grass is 50 to 100 times stronger than the pot of the 1960s smoked at the
Filmore West, Golden Gate park and the Haight- Ashbury district of San Francisco. Many
of the 1960s free-thinkers are now trying to push legalization nation wide. Within 50 miles of Anchorage, marijuana with the highest THC content ever recorded is
cultivated, grown, distributed and smoked. This is a very cash rich crop that sells in the
area of $7,000 to $8,0000 per pound. This pot is raised in ideal indoor growing conditions
and grafted to the best strains worldwide to achieve its exceptional quality. The grass growing business is do cash rich that individuals are willing to risk
everything to receive the high economic benefit. . Those at the top of the marijuana
distribution chain do not use the product. They know the effects of marijuana on the mind,
body, and soul. It destroys motivation, understanding and growth in all users, especially
Alaskas youths. Marinol (Dronabinal) is an approved drug that contains the principal psychoactive
substance in marijuana. Physicians prescribe this approved, quality-controlled drug for
symptoms ranging from anorexia in AIDS patients to nausea associated with Cancer
chemotherapy. Street-grade grass is not needed, nor is it a substitute for Marinol. The psychoactive effect of marijuana is parallel to Marinol on drug users: decreased
cognitive performance and memory, decreased ability to control drives and impulses and
alteration of reality, including distortions in perceptions of objects, sense of time, and
hallucinations. In addition, drug users experience mood changes of euphoria, detachment,
depression, anxiety, panic and paranoia. Street pot with no quality control is bad for any
drug user. Marinol is a controlled substance with high quality control requirements. Ballot
Measure No. 8 has no quality control guidelines. The drug user can grow his own street
grass of unknown psychoactive or THC content. Ballot measure No. 8 is simply a bad law that creates another large state bureaucracy.
Basically, Alaskans will be forced to pay for the ill advised control of illegal drug
users. In addition, drug user patients, their caregivers and physicians prescribing the
street grass are held harmless for the consequences of pot use. Alaskan society as a whole
must bear the burden economically and socially of pot users. How can a well meaning, professional and competent physician prescribe a psychoactive
drug that has not been tested and has no quality control criteria? The answer is that he
or she cannot in good faith and in the best interest of the patient prescribe psychoactive
marijuana without knowing the potency. Ballot measure No.8 is so
poorly conceived and drafted that it is even a disgrace to the marijuana-legalization
movement nation wide. It appears that the author of ballot measure No. 8 may have been
smoking the product he or she endorses during drafting the bill. Do not be fooled. Ballot Measure No. 8 is not about helping debilitated patients, the
sick, the infirm or the dying. The act is about crime and economic greed. Ballot Measure
No. 8 is an attempt to misuse the alleged individual rights to protect individuals and
entities that grow, distribute, sell, transport, possess or use marijuana. Legalization of marijuana tells Alaska youths that adults believe
an illegal, non controlled street drug can be used responsibly. No drug can used
responsibly when the "prescribing physician" has no knowledge of the strength of
the psychoactive ingredient or THC.
From the Anchorage Daily News
letters@adn.com
http://www.adn.com/
By Wevley William Shea
Wevley Shea is an Anchorage attorney and a former US attorney for
Anchorage
See
Why would anyone want to
smoke a medicine? Isn't smoking per se bad for you?
See
No Evidence That
THC Is Addictive Says Maker of Marinol After 9 Month Study Including Law Enforcement
Alaska youths need your support. Vote no on ballot measure No. 8. Approval of this bill
would make it difficult, if not impossible, to reach Alaskas youths and convince
them doing drugs is bad. See
Marijuana, Caffeine,
Thalidomide and the Persecution of the Sick and Dying
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From the Bend Bulletin
Op-ed
bulletin@bendbulletin.com
http://www.bendbulletin.com/
By Mike T. Dugan For the Bulletin
See
Editors of
the Bend Bulletin Oppose Oregon Medical Marijuana Initiative
Dugan is Deschutes County district attorney. His address is Courthouse, Bend, Oregon 97701. Phone: 541-388-6529, FAX- 541-383-0965, Home phone: 541-388-2194
MEDICAL MARIJUANA MERELY A PATH TO LEGALIZATION
I believe that it is time for me to weigh in on Ballot Measure 67. Is it really a measure to ensure that medical use of marijuana can be achieved in Oregon, or is it a backdoor means of legalizing marijuana? A close look at the language of the proposed initiative leads to no other conclusion than the latter. This is not a medical bill; this is a legalization proposal.
The measure proposes that any person with a "debilitating medical condition" is eligible to receive the "registry identification card" which authorizes the "medical use of marijuana." Let us look at the definition of "debilitating medical condition." This condition exists if a person can convince a doctor that he/she is suffering from "severe pain" (I stubbed my toe last week and had a great deal of severe pain) or they are suffering from "severe nausea". ( My wife had the flu last month and it made me nauseous.)
"Medical use of marijuana" is so broadly defined that it, in effect, provides
carte blanche authority to violate the criminal laws of this state. It would allow the
production (manufacture), possession and delivery of marijuana. Of course, only those
persons with the magic "card" can so violate the law, but as the law is written
it allows any person to manufacture, possess or deliver marijuana so long as they can show
a law enforcement officer that they have applied for the card. In those cases where the
person does not have the card and has not applied for the card, this law makes it an
affirmative defense ( an affirmative defense is raised by notice only and must be
disproved by the state beyond a reasonable doubt) that the person either could have
applied for the card or might have the "debilitating medical condition." Short
of this, the law allows any person to raise a defense of "choice of evils."
(Choice of evils means that a person must violate a law in order to prevent greater harm,
which would occur by not violating the law.)
See
Common Law, Common
Sense And Common Decency Rejected By Federal Judge;
Death Is Not "Imminent Harm" For Medical Marijuana Users. Oakland Club To Be
Closed Friday.
Protest And Appeals Planned 2 Articles
and
David Herrick
Denied Proposition 215 & Medical Necessity As Defense, Mocked By Judge; Orange County
Rally
Children are also eligible to receive the "magic card" if only one of the childs parents or legal guardians consents to such.
This means that children, persons under the age of 18 years, can manufacture, possess or deliver marijuana without legal consequences. Is it not evident that society should protect its children? Are we to assume that such a child with the "magic card" will make the right decisions and not provide marijuana to his/her friends at school?It appears that the law is vague on how much marijuana a person can produce, possess or deliver. It says that the person with the "magic card" can have "three mature marijuana plants, four immature plants and one ounce of usable marijuana." But if the card holder has more than this they can raise an affirmative defense to show that the greater amount possessed or manufactured is medically necessary to treat symptoms suffered by the person. One fully mature plant of todays high potency marijuana can be sold for thousands of dollars.
Oregon district attorneys are generally opposed to this proposed initiative and believe that it should be defeated in November. I am not opposed to, nor do I believe most district attorneys are opposed to, medically sound treatment procedures for patients with terminal diseases. Self-medication is not the answer. This proposal initiative goes to far. This is a back door attempt to legalize marijuana. Should this proposal pass, I believe virtually all criminal investigations and prosecutions for marijuana law violations would cease.
I urge close and careful reading of this proposal. In doing so, you will note that it
is a bad law.
See
Is medical
marijuana just the opening wedge to legalize marijuana generally?
and Isn't legalizing marijuana just the opening wedge to legalizing all drugs? require("content_bottom.inc"); ?>