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Let's Roll: Nashville Scene Endorses TN Safe Access to Medical Cannabis Act

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Fly by night Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-28-10 03:53 PM
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Let's Roll: Nashville Scene Endorses TN Safe Access to Medical Cannabis Act
Edited on Thu Jan-28-10 04:04 PM by Fly by night
LET'S ROLL: The Sick are suffering. The economy is hurting. There may be a cure for both:
medical marijuana

Jim Ridley, Nashville Scene

http://www.nashvillescene.com/2010-01-28/news/let-s-roll/1

(I have posted this cover story in its entirety with the permission of the editor. However, if any of you want to make a comment and/or thank the Nashville Scene for its strong support for medical marijuana, please visit the link and do so. If we never stop fighting, we cannot lose. Fly by night)
---------------

Tucked away near a winding road in rural Maury County, the Santa Fe Diner is the picture of homespun Americana. It's the kind of place where people get up to hold the front door for an elderly patron's walker, where lifelong neighbors need only greet each other with a friendly nod. It's Friday — fish day, as the flyer says under the wall-mounted photo of Santa Fe High School, class of '56. On the front porch, an American flag flutters in a cold breeze while owner Carolyn Oakley prepares for the lunch rush.

The Santa Fe Diner and its proprietor are hubs of the community, as is clear from the cars filling the gravel lot, the photos on the walls and the warm greetings exchanged inside. But in the eyes of the state of Tennessee, and 36 other states, Carolyn Oakley is something else: an outlaw.

There has to be a good reason why an upstanding citizen would risk prison time and the loss of her belongings, including her business. Oakley's reason slept next to her for 24 years. In the prime of life, her husband, Arthur Oakley, was stricken with a disease that shut down both his kidneys. He was immediately hospitalized, given shunts in his chest and placed on dialysis.

For two years, as he waited for a kidney transplant, Arthur suffered while his wife watched helplessly. He'd always been a hearty eater, but the powerful medicines he was taking killed his appetite. His weight dwindled. His blood pressure skyrocketed, which meant even more medicine. He became miserable, depressed. Eventually he refused to eat.

"It took away his want to live," Oakley remembers.

After two years, Arthur was dangerously frail. In desperation, he and his wife talked to Bernie Ellis, a regular at the Santa Fe. It was known to some that Ellis, who had a 35-year career as a public-health epidemiologist, grew his own marijuana to relieve a painful spine and hip condition. It was also known he shared his stash free of charge with AIDS and cancer patients. Ellis volunteered to provide Arthur with free pot if his doctors agreed.

Their assent was hardly a sure thing. Medical marijuana remains a topic of intense, polarizing controversy in the medical field. Its status as a Schedule I drug — the harshest classification given to a narcotic, higher than cocaine or crystal meth — means that any doctor who prescribes it in a state without a licensed program runs the risk of prosecution. Indeed, when Arthur raised the issue early on with his first doctor, the reply was swift and strict: either no pot, or no kidney transplant.

His new doctors at Centennial Medical Center, however, saw that if he didn't start eating again or reducing his dangerously high blood pressure, the kidney transplant would be a moot issue. According to Carolyn Oakley, they said that unless his health improved, he wouldn't survive the surgery. They told the Oakleys, she says, to do whatever they needed to get Arthur eating again. Arthur went to see Bernie Ellis.

Once Arthur started smoking marijuana, Carolyn Oakley says, the change in his health was dramatic. Not only did his appetite return, she recalls, his nausea went away. His blood pressure subsided. In a particularly gladdening turn, so did his depression. Ellis hired Arthur to work outdoors on his farm and drive a tractor, something he hadn't felt up to doing in years. "It made him feel like a man again," Oakley says. Even above the clatter of plates in the back, the pride in her voice carries.

Arthur Oakley lived two more years, good years. In the end, he got his transplant, but a rare blood disorder caused his body to reject the kidney. In November 2003, he died of a heart attack. The service was held at a funeral home in Columbia, and the Oakleys' neighbors and the Santa Fe Diner's regulars crowded into the chapel.

Among them was Bernie Ellis, whose own fortunes had undergone a drastic turn in the intervening years. In 2002, drug agents on ATVs and in helicopters stormed his farm in the nearby community of Fly. According to a tactical field report, agents found some 537 marijuana plants, a number that was amended for unknown reasons a month later to 300. Ellis puts the actual number of mature, full-size plants closer to a couple dozen, but no matter — even that was enough to raise the prospect of hard time and losing his farm.

To avoid the worst-case scenario, Ellis pleaded guilty in late 2003 to manufacturing cannabis plants. He later tried to withdraw the plea, but with no success. When he walked into the funeral home, then, everyone in the close-knit community had to know he had admitted publicly to a felony.

What trumped that, though, was that they knew what he had done for Arthur Oakley. Carolyn Oakley recalls that even Enoch George, the Maury County sheriff, stopped to shake Ellis' hand as mourners filed from the chapel. To this day, over the corner table in the Santa Fe Diner where Oakley sits with a reporter, a framed Scene cover calling Ellis the "Marijuana Martyr" occupies a place of pride. If there's any stigma attached to medical marijuana, Oakley hasn't seen it.

"I haven't lost the first customer because of it," she says, her voice firm.

It's because of stories like Carolyn Oakley's, proponents of medical marijuana say, that a sea change in attitudes toward the issue is under way. Two decades ago, it was easy to dismiss medical-marijuana advocates as a fringe element — stoners trying to sneak legalization past the nation's drug-enforcement gatekeepers. Got a hangnail that's bothering you? Whatever you say, Cheech. Coming right up.

Today, though, millions of people are only a degree of separation from someone whose all-too-real suffering has been eased by cannabis. So what if medical marijuana were a business — an above-ground, state-sanctioned business that could funnel millions of dollars into Tennessee's economy, under the oversight of local law enforcement and the state agriculture and health departments?

That's the remarkable proposal coming up for review in the Tennessee legislature this session. A bill introduced Jan. 13 by Sen. Beverly Marrero in the state Senate and Rep. Jeanne Richardson in the House — SB 2511/HB 2562, aka the Safe Access to Medical Cannabis Act — provides a blueprint for implementing a statewide medical marijuana program from seed to flower.

The Memphis Democrats' bill proposes nothing less than licensing local farmers, cultivating cannabis at strongly restricted compounds, and selling prescribed doses of high-grade marijuana through pharmacies — at a low price specifically designed to benefit the sick and undermine illicit dealers. If enacted, it would be on arrival the most tightly controlled of the 14 state-run medical-marijuana programs either under way or in development in the U.S. It would also be the most patient-friendly.

In a stroke of irony, the proposal's architect is none other than Bernie Ellis, who has a distinguished track record assisting states such as Wyoming and New Mexico devise and manage substance-abuse programs. This is not a substance-abuse issue, Ellis says. This is about restoring marijuana to its rightful place in the arsenal of modern medicine.

"It's the safest therapeutic substance known to man," Ellis says.

To pass, the bill will have to clear hurdles that would make an Olympian shudder, which only start with the partisan rancor and hard conservative shift of Tennessee's legislature. Tougher still, there's the matter of marijuana's Schedule I classification — which maintains, despite the evidence of the nation's eyes and ears, that pot is more dangerous and has less medical benefit than crack cocaine. Changing that classification will require the federal equivalent of plate tectonics.

"From our standpoint, law enforcement should be happy because we're the demand for medical marijuana off the street, take money and power away from illegal dealers and put them in the hands of the people," says Rose Cox, a lobbyist and 13-year political operative with a background in health care lobbying, who has been hired by NORML to push the medical-marijuana effort in the Tennessee legislature. Still, she concedes there's "a healthy amount of skepticism on both sides" and major concerns about federal law.

Yet Howard Wooldridge, a Washington drug policy specialist who co-founded the group Law Enforcement Against Prohibition (LEAP) and now directs Citizens Opposing Prohibition (COP), believes the timing has never been better for a serious consideration of medical marijuana. The tipping point came late last year, he says, when the Department of Justice issued a directive instructing federal prosecutors not to go after participants in state-sanctioned medical-marijuana programs, ostensibly to conserve government resources. Independently, the powerful American Medical Association reversed its long-standing support of the Schedule I classification, indicating that cannabis held promise for medical research.

Why the shift? Wooldridge, who served for 18 years as a Michigan law-enforcement officer, believes that the current generation in power (many of whom came of age in the 1960s and early '70s) is rediscovering marijuana as a medicine after years of post-college abstention. They know from their own experiences that one puff of weed does not an addict make. Furthermore, the anecdotal evidence of marijuana's medicinal properties — not to mention the many polls showing wide margins of support for doctor-patient medical-marijuana treatment — is by now too overwhelming to ignore.

"The current economic crisis combined with the generational shift will move drug prohibition into the history books in five years," Wooldridge predicts.

The anecdotal evidence today isn't just coming from the expected quarters. It's coming from die-hard conservatives with anything but love for the Obama administration. It's coming from physicians who have seen gravely ill patients respond to a substance they can't legally study, let alone prescribe. It's coming from the families of lawmakers, some of whom maintain a public stance against the issue.

Perhaps most importantly, it's starting to come from ordinary voters who never had a stake in the issue before, but have experienced firsthand an improvement in a loved one's quality of life — or their own.

Dozens of people sent testimonials along those lines to U.S. District Judge William Haynes when he was weighing Bernie Ellis' sentence in 2005. Mrs. Ellen Humphrey, a woman who'd been Ellis' neighbor for 34 years, watched her husband Junior wither from lung cancer; the nurses at his Columbia care facility suggested he get some marijuana post-haste. "The marijuana Bernie Ellis provided ... made it possible for Junior to rest and to sleep," she wrote, "and it helped him keep his appetite up." G.A. Webber, then a 35-year-old man living with AIDS, wrote that he used marijuana to alleviate nausea from his anti-HIV medicines and pain from a dual hip replacement.

Mrs. Margie Aderhold, an ovarian-cancer survivor, put the matter bluntly to the presiding judge. "Before you pass judgment," she wrote, "please consider how you would feel if your own parents or children (or you yourself) were dying from a disease and could be helped to live longer or in less pain by using marijuana."

In the end, Ellis received a four-year probation sentence (later reduced to two years) and was forced to surrender 25 acres of farmland to the federal government, ending a seven-year ordeal. The same legal nightmare could easily have happened to Carolyn Oakley. But the plain-speaking woman with the straight brown hair and no-nonsense manner says the threat of losing her freedom and her diner never deterred her from helping her husband.

"If we lose the business," she remembers telling their grown children, "we don't need it no way."

Now there is the chance for Tennessee to legally relieve the suffering of terminal patients and the severely ill, while shoring up rural communities, making real headway in the drug war and channeling new money into the state's coffers. All it will take is reversing almost a century of demonization that has cast marijuana as Public Enemy No. 1, not a healing agent with untapped potential.

For such a volatile issue, medical marijuana is hardly new. According to a 2001 book called Marijuana and Medicine: Assessing the Science Base produced by the National Academy of Science's Institute of Medicine (IOM), it dates back at least to the Chinese emperor Chen Nung some 27 centuries before the birth of Christ. The book also reproduces labels that show the U.S. pharmaceutical giant Eli Lilly was manufacturing and selling a marijuana tincture throughout the 1930s.

But by 1942, marijuana had been removed from the United States Pharmacopoeia, the standard-setting volume for medicines and dosages, on grounds that it was a dangerous drug. Thanks to its association with black jazz musicians on one hand and Mexican immigrants on the other — and exacerbated by the U.S. government's frankly racist propaganda — cannabis became linked in the public mind with evils ranging from race-mixing to homicidal frenzy. The 1936 scare film Reefer Madness remains an unforgettable artifact of wacky-weed hysteria, with its squeaky-clean teens turned pinwheel-eyed dope fiends. A year later, the plant was effectively outlawed.

In 1970, as the Nixon administration shook its fist at the counterculture, the U.S. government created the landmark Controlled Substance Act. The act created five classifications for controlled substances, weighing their health benefits against their addictive power and potential for harm. Tobacco and alcohol do not appear on the lists, but covered substances range from cough syrup (Schedule V) to oxycodone (Schedule II). Among those that made it all the way to Schedule I, the most restrictive ranking, were heroin, LSD — and marijuana.

For four decades hence, that classification has dominated policy on marijuana. But some states in the 1970s and '80s passed laws that either lowered marijuana's ranking or paved the way for clinical testing. A bill signed into law in 1984 by then-Gov. Lamar Alexander even allowed for medical marijuana in Tennessee, although the law was repealed in 1992 when thousands of AIDS patients nationwide applied to their states' programs and the federal government stopped supplying the medicine.

In the years since, however, 14 states and the District of Columbia have said yes to medical marijuana, the majority through popular ballot initiatives that won by wide margins. That has typically put the states at odds with the federal government, which has claimed precedence over local measures — one reason last fall's Department of Justice directive was seen as a breakthrough.

TBI special agent in charge T.J. Jordan cautions that the DOJ directive is hardly set in stone. He's part of the administrative side of the Governor's Task Force on Marijuana Eradication, a task force composed of the TBI, the Tennessee Highway Patrol, the Tennessee Alcoholic Beverage Commission and other agencies. Since 1983, it has become one of the top six outdoor-cultivation eradication programs in the U.S., destroying some 400,000 marijuana plants last year at an estimated street value of $320 million. If medical-marijuana advocates are pinning their hopes to the policy directive, the agent asks, what happens if the next elections don't go their way?

"That's today's administration's policy," says Jordan, who expresses concerns about just what the law-enforcement oversight in the Safe Access bill entails. "What's the next administration's policy?"

If the medical-marijuana movement were just a ploy to get access to pot, chances are that it would have gained little traction. Howard Wooldridge says that when he addresses Rotary groups on the topic, as he has done more than 400 times, their overriding concern is, "Will drug use skyrocket?" (The short answer, according to available data, is no.) But the cause has been helped enormously in recent years by doctors, scientists and medical researchers, who would seem to have proved to even the most calcified skeptic that the plant has properties worth researching.

According to Sunil Aggarwal, a University of Washington M.D./Ph.D. candidate who has co-authored several papers summarizing the many medicinal uses of cannabis, some of the many complex chemical compounds found in marijuana (known as "cannabinoids") have shown promising effects in treating neurological disorders. These include multiple sclerosis, Lou Gehrig's disease (or ALS), Alzheimer's disease and certain forms of brain tumors.

Still more scientific evidence suggests marijuana may work well in tandem with other treatments — reducing the gut-wrenching side effects of chemotherapy, for example, or the lack of appetite caused by some anti-HIV drugs. From glaucoma to rheumatoid arthritis, from hepatitis C to osteoporosis, enough evidence of marijuana's potential for good exists that a growing number of doctors agree the plant deserves further study.

"A huge policy shift is happening," says Aggarwal, who believes "an emerging consensus in the medical community" wants to see marijuana downgraded from Schedule I so earnest research can begin. That doesn't sound like such a controversial position. Right?

Ask the American College of Physicians. A prominent physicians' group second only in size to the AMA, the ACP issued a position paper last year that called simply for revisiting the Schedule I classification.

From the response, though, the august body might as well have recommended firing up a doob during open heart surgery. Dr. J. Fred Ralston, the Fayetteville physician who serves as the ACP's president-elect, says some marijuana advocates and opponents alike misconstrued the paper to fit their agendas. In the ensuing shouting match, he says, they obscured its reasonable, thoroughly middle-of-the-road call for more research.

"I think you can make an argument both ways," says Ralston with caution, explaining he has no position on the bill in the legislature. "This is a hot-button issue, and we had a very narrowly focused paper that said we are never against more investigation."

At the same time, Aggarwal says, the significance of the AMA and ACP's new positions should not be underestimated.

"When the two largest medical organizations in the U.S. independently arrive at the evidence-based conclusion that marijuana's status as a Schedule I drug should be seriously reconsidered," he wrote in an opinion piece on the pain-management website Pain.com, "federal drug regulators should take note."

On one point, though, many medical-marijuana advocates and opponents agree: They don't want Tennessee to have a program like California's. Voted in by ballot measure under Proposition 215 in 1996, California's laissez-faire program has become an out-of-control system where almost anyone can be a patient, any patient can be a grower, and dispensaries range from sedate waiting rooms to jokey clubhouses with bud menus and T-shirts.

Critics say it's essentially back-door legalization — which is exactly what many users love about it. A Nashville musician who has purchasing privileges in California says it was "laughably easy" to obtain his prescription, and easier still to buy the actual weed, available in strains of different potency. (Try the purple, he says.)

But Ellis, hardly a prude on the subject, disdains the California model for several reasons. One is what he calls a "wink-wink-nudge-nudge" flippancy that has made the program a punchline, damaging its credibility. Another is the uneven potency, which renders dosages unpredictable and hence less effective as medicine. Then there's the price: sometimes as much as $80 per eighth of an ounce, comparable to street value. For people hit with catastrophic medical expenses, Ellis says, that price is "unconscionable."

What Ellis favors, as proposed in the pending bill, is a fire-sale price of $60 per ounce — a staggering cost cut that's cheap enough for hard-hit patients, yet costly enough to yield a significant return to the grower, the state and the pharmacy. (The bill envisions a split of $30 per ounce to the licensed farmer, $10 to the pharmacy and $20 to the state to cover the cost of implementation, with excess state revenues going to fund indigent health care and substance-abuse treatment.)

Tennessee's program would be far more strict in many ways, from qualifying illnesses (a list of 12 life-threatening or severely painful conditions) to specifications for growing, processing and packaging the medicine and regular law-enforcement oversight. Nevertheless, if 150,000 people — an estimated 15 percent of Tennessee's current cannabis users — were to sign up, such a program could be grossing $450 million a year in three years' time.

Is safe access to state-regulated medical marijuana a pipe dream in Tennessee? Perhaps. "I doubt that Tennessee will be on the vanguard of any change," Dr. J. Fred Ralston says. So far, no Republican has stepped up as co-sponsor, but Sen. Marrero sees no reason why one wouldn't.

"Just look at all the fuss over health care," says Marrero, whose son-in-law benefited from medical marijuana when he underwent chemo and radiation treatment for cancer years ago. "All you hear about is the fear that some bureaucrat will come between you and your doctor — well, this is a pretty clear case of that. Our bill specifies that the medicine would only be available with a doctor's prescription and can only be purchased in a pharmacy, but for some reason some people think the government knows better than the doctors and pharmacists. Frankly, passing this bill is going to require legislators of both parties with the courage to do the right thing."

"Politicians will eventually get hurt by not supporting it," says Paul Kuhn, a veteran Nashville investment counselor who is both a longtime Republican and a longtime supporter of NORML. His belief in medical marijuana was cemented when Jeanne, his wife of 31 years, was diagnosed with breast cancer in the mid-1990s. She was 4-feet-11½, and the chemotherapy poisons pumping through her took a heavy toll. Never a pot smoker herself, she found that marijuana was the only thing that helped her through grueling rounds of chemo. The marijuana gave her comfort until she succumbed to cancer in 1996.

"I just smell marijuana and it reminds me of chemo," Jeanne once said wearily. But after trying yet another inefficient dose of conventional medicine, she would say, "Bring me the damn pot."

In preparation for a particularly agonizing treatment, she once went so far as to show up at Saint Thomas Hospital with a one-hitter pipe. Nurses were flustered. Additional personnel were called. The Kuhns stood firm. Someone with ultimate authority had to be consulted. A call was placed upstairs, Kuhn says, to the hospital's chief legal counsel.

The answer came back: It was in the patient's best interest.
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Romulox Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-28-10 03:55 PM
Response to Original message
1. k/r for sanity and compassion. nt
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Blue_In_AK Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-28-10 04:19 PM
Response to Original message
2. This is an excellent step.
Good luck to Tennessee.
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dotymed Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jan-29-10 03:57 PM
Response to Reply #2
55. Strangely enough,
I am getting ready to move home to Tn. in 2 months. I am disabled, with critical stage heart disease and I want to be near my family. I visited for Christmas. My 52 y.o. "old hippie" (he has heart disease too) brother talked me in to smoking some with him while I was there. Almost immediately (this was hi-grade "killer weed") I felt ten years younger, and acted it. I was able to do things I haven't been able to do for years. And I felt great doing it. Sadly, when I left and returned back to IN.(where I don't associate with anyone who has weed) I quickly returned to my "half-man" status. I really have not thought about it till now. I just assumed I was having a "good week" and being around family for the holidays had been great. Now, it dawns on me. I don't want to be an "outlaw" and the cost of that weed was $500.00 an oz. !! More than we paid for a pound when I was young. But, yes I will begin partaking again. I will probably (hopefully) be able to return to some type of work. I will probably be self employed, so I don't have to worry about a drug test (lawyers, judges, politicians, CEO's don't take them either) but I am planning on feeling alive while I am.
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Uncle Joe Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-28-10 04:36 PM
Response to Original message
3. Personally, I'm for legalization but I salute the Nashville Scene for their enlightened, progressive
coverage re: the medical aspects.

Kicked and recommended.

Thanks for the thread, Fly by night.:thumbsup:
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sonias Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-28-10 04:40 PM
Response to Original message
4. Hell of a good write up Bernie
Good luck on that "Safe Access to Medical Cannabis Act" in TN. I hope it passes and I thank you for all the hard work and suffering you have endured to help others.

Congratulations! Keep up the good fight!

:patriot:

Sonia
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JeffR Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-28-10 04:42 PM
Response to Original message
5. Kicked & recommended with enthusiasm!
There's a word to describe people like you: heroes.

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Ignis Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-28-10 06:35 PM
Original message
+1
The people on the front lines of this battle have opened themselves up to a high degree of risk with little reward...other than the health and happiness of their loved ones.
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mike_c Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-28-10 04:44 PM
Response to Original message
6. thank you, Bernie, for all you've done and continue to do....
Frankly, I'm a proponent of complete and unconditional legalization, and will continue to work toward that goal. Luckily, I live in northern California where pot growing is the acknowledged backbone of the economy, and local law enforcement is not especially interested in busting users except as a matter of convenience, i.e. as one of those things you can pretty much always find to bust someone for if you're looking for a reason to arrest them or otherwise hassle them. Folks like me, who grow a little pot in a sunny window and help keep the green economy alive by buying the local hydroponic risk little. Still, we need to change the laws. My SO and I are good members of our community-- we should not be criminalized for choosing to smoke marijuana because it helps us relieve stress and, as we grow older, it helps us live healthier lives.
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Hissyspit Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-28-10 04:47 PM
Response to Original message
7. Kickin' & Grinnin'
:)
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Echo In Light Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-28-10 05:09 PM
Response to Original message
8. K&R
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AzDar Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-28-10 05:14 PM
Response to Original message
9. K & R
:kick:
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PJPhreak Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-28-10 05:16 PM
Response to Original message
10. Kicking for sane drug policys!
My SO of almost 28 years is here today because of the therapeutic effects of cannabis...we have at times risked our freedom (and had it taken away) for this cause.
We have and will continue to do everything to get this medicine to those that need it.

And no Agent Mike,we are and have been sober and law abiding citizens of the state we live in for over 6 years now.

GO BERNIE!!
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asdjrocky Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-28-10 05:33 PM
Response to Original message
11. Just regular people, looking for a little help and a plant can give it to them.
Thanks for posting this. It's a smart move to run away a bit from the way we are doing it here in cali for your neck of the woods.

Hope all goes well.
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asdjrocky Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-28-10 05:44 PM
Response to Original message
12. And by the way Bernie-
Great work here!
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bleever Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-28-10 05:44 PM
Response to Original message
13. Tremendous kudos to you, Bernie.
Compassion in action.

:yourock:
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Ghost in the Machine Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-28-10 05:46 PM
Response to Original message
14. Kicked and highly recommended... thanks for all you do, Bernie
Hopefully we will have some legislators with some brains and compassion who can get some sane laws passed here quickly..


Peace,

Ghost

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pleah Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-28-10 05:51 PM
Response to Original message
15. K&R Outstanding article!
Thanks for sharing! :)
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scarletwoman Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-28-10 05:53 PM
Response to Original message
16. Wonderful article! All that sanity in one piece -- it's amazing!
Wishing you all the best of luck for the medical marijuana efforts in Tennessee.

It's beyond absurd that this humble weed is such a source of controversy. Why shouldn't human beings be free to partake of the fruits of the Earth? Why shouldn't human beings be free to injest into their own bodies what they wish?

That is the larger question, surely.

Thank you for this wonderful post, and bless you for all the good you've done in the world.

sw
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DemReadingDU Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-28-10 06:16 PM
Response to Original message
17. It was in the patient's best interest.

Isn't this the way it should be?

Thanks for the update!
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Better Believe It Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-28-10 06:17 PM
Response to Original message
18. K & R
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Ignis Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-28-10 06:34 PM
Response to Original message
19. K&R. We have more to fear from Weed Panels than "Death Panels."
I applaud the Scene for its brave stand on this issue.

:patriot:

If we can get a few more good, substantive articles like this one in the more mainstream rags, I think we're well on the way to winning hearts and minds on this issue.
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Fly by night Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-28-10 06:35 PM
Response to Original message
20. Thanks to everyone for their comments and kicks.
We are the ones we've been waiting for -- even here in Tennessee.

I still believe that New Mexico is the best state in our country to grow high-quality medical cannabis, for both environmental and cultural reasons. The problem there is getting Governor Richardson to take a more active and assertive interest in a program that is (mostly) little smoke-and-lots of mirrors right now.

But I know a littl' old country boy from Tennessee who would be happy to give the Land of Enchantment a hand. It is a most beautiful state, and I once grew excellent cannabis there, not realizing that my plants were 100 feet from the NM Highway Patrol helicopter pad in Pojoaque.

Still harvested 'em all (back in '92).
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Ignis Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-28-10 06:38 PM
Response to Reply #20
22. "my plants were 100 feet from the NM Highway Patrol helicopter pad"
:rofl:

I know a few old-school (i.e., pre-Prop 215) California growers who have a delightful cache of war stories like this one. Let's just say that there are a lot of military/state properties that used to have unused land, and some people saw that unused land as a big waste.

:smoke:
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kenichol Donating Member (198 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-28-10 06:35 PM
Response to Original message
21. Such good news
Your responses are so rational...and compassionate.
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John Q. Citizen Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-28-10 06:41 PM
Response to Original message
23. The revolution is on the move!
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gateley Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-28-10 06:43 PM
Response to Original message
24. K&R -- this was great!! nt
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Hekate Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-28-10 06:45 PM
Response to Original message
25. Compassion and sanity. KnR
:hug:

Hekate
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leftstreet Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-28-10 06:52 PM
Response to Original message
26. K&R
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Bluenorthwest Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-28-10 06:59 PM
Response to Original message
27. Cheers to and for you Bernie, this was a great read
And I would dearly love to see the beautiful state of Tennessee take these steps forward. Of course, here's to the day the law has nothing to do with any of it, but anything that lets those who need it the most have their medicine is a good step, for as you know, it can be miraculous.
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unapatriciated Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-28-10 07:01 PM
Response to Original message
28. K&R
Thanks Bernie.
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yowzayowzayowza Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-28-10 07:33 PM
Response to Original message
29. Excellent writeup!!!
Edited on Thu Jan-28-10 07:48 PM by yowzayowzayowza
"A sea change in attitudes" is happenin' all over
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Fly by night Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-28-10 08:04 PM
Response to Reply #29
30. In response to your earlier post re: physician ignorance of the risks (not) of cannabis use
Here are three articles that you might want to take back to those physicians who hassled you when you were in the ICU recently:

Feds' Top Pot Researcher Says Marijuana Does Not Cause Lung Cancer:

A U of California researcher who has performed US-government sponsored studies of marijuana and lung function for over 30 years says that pot does not cause lung cancer. Dr. Donald Tashkin said that, when he began his work thirty years ago, he "opposed ... legalization because thought it would lead to increased use and that would lead to increased health effects." However, he now admits that his decades' worth of scientific research revealed an opposite conclusion.

In 2006, Tashkin led the largest population case-control study ever to assess the use of marijuana and lung cancer risk. The study, which included more than 2,200 subjects (1,212 cases and 1,040 controls), reported that marijuana smoking was not positively associated with cancers of the lung or upper aerodigestive tract – even among individuals who reported smoking more than 22,000 joints during their lifetime.

"What we found instead was no association and even a suggestion of some protective effect," Tashkin told the newspaper chain, noting that cannabinoids cause "cells die ... before they age enough to develop mutations that might lead to cancer." For more information on marijuana smoke and cancer risk, please see: http://norml.org/index.cfm?Group_ID=6891. A literature review of cannabinoids' anti-cancer properties is available at: http://www.norml.org//index.cfm?Group_ID=7008.
--------
Marijuana May Reduce Risk of Certain Cancers, Study Says
August 27, 2009

A new study finds that long-term marijuana users have a lower risk of certain head and neck cancers, Reuters reported Aug. 25.

Researchers from Brown University studied patients with head and neck squamous-cell carcinoma (HNSCC) and a control group and found that subjects who had smoked marijuana for 10 to 20 years had a 62-percent reduced risk of getting HNSCC. Those who smoked marijuana 0.5 to 1.5 times per week had a 48-percent reduction in risk.

The study authors, led by Karl T. Kelsey, said that the findings may be linked to the known antitumor action of cannabinoids. However, they cautioned that larger studies are needed to confirm the findings and that the risks of marijuana use may outweigh any health benefits.

The study was published in the August 2009 issue of the journal Cancer Prevention Research.
---------

The chemotherapeutic properties of cannabis for killing at least six different cancer cell lines is (finally) getting media attention, though primarily in the new (and improved) media. For a good summary of what we know, read this piece by my friend, Paul Armentano: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/paul-armentano/if-pot-prevented-cancer-y_b_261157.html
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Royal Sloan 09 Donating Member (286 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-28-10 08:09 PM
Response to Original message
31. K & R, Solution = Legalize, eom
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Q3JR4 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-28-10 08:14 PM
Response to Original message
32. K/R for reclassification and more research.
My political views lean hard to the left, I am in fact an outright socialist. On the issue of drug legalization, however, (and especially THIS drug) I am 100% libertarian. If you are a free citizen you have the right to put whatever you want into your body (as long as it doesn't hurt anyone else). This also informs my understanding of physician assisted suicide.

So, while I was going to call for reclassification and more research, I'm going to finish this whole thing with an outright cry for legalization.

Q3JR4
Even though he can get some right now if he wanted, Q3JR4 has never had a hit of marijuana. Ever. Even then, he still wants to live in a free society.
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keepthemhonest Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-28-10 08:32 PM
Response to Original message
33. Not a smoker my self however,
If I am ever that sick I would take that marijuana over the painkillers that doctors prescribe regularly and don't they blink and eye about it.Meanwhile, those presription drugs ruin your liver and kidneys and other vital organs,hey but they are legal.I know who will be against all this legalization of pot is the pharmaceutical companies because you are interfering with their market.

Bernie, thanks for steering me over here that was great to read and I know it has been hard for your but I consider you a philanthropist of sorts.You are amazing and I like the Tennesee aproach to legalization although personally if they sold pot right next to beer I wouldn't think twice of it.Your a pioneer! Your a ground breaker!

So many things said in that article it hard to remark on all of it but I will send you positive vibes you are doing the right thing for all the right reasons.I think somehow the land will come back to you it is your beautiful land and you are doig beautiful things on it and it will come back.I know it was not all of your land but still it was yours and it still is.It is coming back.

Amazing!
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dotymed Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jan-29-10 04:12 PM
Response to Reply #33
58. Amen,
They have me on morphine, Norco...20 meds a day. I think when I get home, with the weed, I can forgo most of these meds.
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Triana Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-28-10 08:39 PM
Response to Original message
34. YES. It's WAY past time for some sane drug laws!
Thank you Fly by Night for all you do! :hug:
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druidity33 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-28-10 09:45 PM
Response to Original message
35. you're really a hero Bernie.
As an IBS sufferer and user of MM to alleviate severe cramps and pain, i applaud your efforts.

God bless you.

K&R.

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Gregorian Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-28-10 10:02 PM
Response to Original message
36. We have to turn this mad page of American twisted logic around.
I think it's a combination of fear, and economics that has lead us to a period in our history where a large percentage of the society is literally living out lives of fugitives within their own country.

Great article. We've waited a long long time. Some of us longer than others. Some who will never see the day we come to our senses and end this mess.
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opihimoimoi Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-28-10 10:39 PM
Response to Original message
37. Hope TN goes High as Hawaii, Calif, etc (17) States for those suffering from PAIN
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underpants Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-28-10 10:44 PM
Response to Original message
38. ||||
for a later read. it is late.
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appal_jack Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-28-10 11:13 PM
Response to Original message
39. K & R & a question
Do you really think that $30 an ounce could be sustainable for growers? That's basically 1/10 the current price a grower of high quality mj receives. Of course, with it being illegal, most growers have more expenses (concealment, maybe electricity for indoor scenes, etc.) and demand more payment for the risks they are taking.

Although the wink-wink nudge-nudge attitude in Cali might seem humorous, I believe that the dramatic opening of mj culture and distribution that Prop. 415 has been a great, though not unequivocal, benefit. Some folks who have passed through Arcata lately have told me of empty neighborhoods, where all the houses are grow scenes. And of course the gangs and criminal elements using the cover of medical mj production to feed distribution networks out of state is a problem (though one that would disappear quickly if all states would follow Cali's lead).

But these are minor questions. I am in awe of your excellent work Bernie!

:hug: :fistbump: :hug:

-app
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Fly by night Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jan-29-10 08:30 AM
Response to Reply #39
49. Here's a section from our position paper that addresses the cost issue.
Edited on Fri Jan-29-10 08:34 AM by Fly by night
"Pricing – At present, Tennessee patients who seek out marijuana on the streets are forced to pay from $200-$600 per ounce for this medicine, even though its quality and purity – and the conditions under which it was grown and processed – are usually unknown. Unfortunately, this pricing range has been duplicated in most states with existing medical cannabis programs, in great part because medical cannabis in those states is often obtained from the same illicit market. This pricing level for medical cannabis is indefensible and unwarranted and it should not be repeated in Tennessee.

"For the sake of this prospectus, we are proposing that Tennessee’s medical cannabis be provided to patients at a standard unit cost of $60 per ounce, regardless of the particular cultivar that patients are prescribed. (Based on the current level of knowledge about the differing medical benefits of different cannabis cultivars, we anticipate that at least four strains of cannabis will be grown in Tennessee.) For this price, farmers (or the UT/ARE farms) will receive approximately $30 per ounce, the State of Tennessee will receive approximately $20 per ounce (to fund all costs of the administration of this program, with all excess income going into the state’s general fund or allocated to specific programs, such as substance abuse treatment or indigent health care) and the participating pharmacist will receive approximately $10 per ounce. This allocation of income is subject to adjustment, depending on which aspects of the medical cannabis program are performed by each sector.

"The smaller packages of medical cannabis (the one-quarter ounce size) may be billed at $30 per package in order to address the inelastic costs of packaging and distribution of these packages. Any excess income obtained by the sales of medical cannabis in these smaller packages, compared with ounce packages, will be retained by the State of Tennessee.

"Under this pricing structure, farmers will receive approximately $500 per pound for the dried female flowers they produce (and a separate, but lower, amount for excess leaf trimmings if they are processed into alternate forms of the medicine). The State of Tennessee will receive approximately $300 per pound to fund the program, with any excess income going into the general fund. Pharmacists will receive approximately $150 per pound for their participation.

"For the sake of this prospectus, these pricing levels would aggregate as follows. If we presume that, to initiate this program, the three UT/ARE farms would each produce approximately 2,500 pounds of usable medicine (not counting the excess leaf trimmings) per harvest, that would result in approximately 7,500 pounds of medicine statewide that would serve a minimum of 2,500 patients (at a use level of one ounce per week). The value of this initial crop would thus calculate out as follows:

Income from production (farmers’ portion) $500 X 7,500 pounds = $3,750,000
Income from state sponsorship (state’s portion) $300 X 7,500 pounds = $2,250,000
Income from distribution (pharmacists’ portion) $150 X 7,500 pounds = $1,125,000

Total gross income: $7,125,000

"At this pricing level, all costs would be covered for all program components of Tennessee’s medical cannabis program, and the program would be able to generate funds for the state’s general fund from the inception of the program. This is particularly the case at the initiation of the program, as the “farmers’ portion” would also be assigned to a state agency, the UT/ARE farms, with any excess income above the production and program development costs also being assigned to the general fund.

"If we project this program to grow to serve patients with other conditions for which medical cannabis is currently being prescribed elsewhere, these resultant estimates become quite impressive. For example, we can presume that, within five years, 150,000 patients may be enrolled in Tennessee’s medical cannabis program. This number is not unrealistic, since adding other medical conditions such as arthritis, anorexia, chronic pain, fibromyalgia, Crohn’s disease, Parkinson’s disease, epilepsy and other conditions for which medical cannabis has been shown to be beneficial would dwarf the initial 150,000 estimate of eligible patients with the first six qualifying conditions alone (cancer, HIV/AIDS, multiple sclerosis, glaucoma, intractable spasticity due to spinal cord injury and hepatitis C.)

"For the sake of discussion, let us estimate that these patients consume, on average, one ounce of medical cannabis per week. (Again, some patients will consume much less and others will consume more.) That consumption level would require approximately 500,000 pounds of medical cannabis to be made available each year. At that level, the following gross income levels result:

Income from production (farmers’ portion) $500 X 500,000 pounds = $250,000,000
Income from state sponsorship (state’s portion) $300 X 500,000 pounds = $150,000,000
Income from distribution (pharmacists’ portion) $150 X 500,000 pounds = $75,000,000

Total gross income: $475,000,000

"Of course, the costs for program administration would grow with the expansion of Tennessee’s medical cannabis program to this level. It would be necessary to hire additional staff at both the UT/ARE farms and within the TN Department of Agriculture to handle the training, certification and monitoring of participating farmers who are involved with the program. Likewise, processing, storage and distribution costs would increase. However, at this level, there would be economies of scale that will increase the efficiency of the program. In any event, the total costs for state administration of this program, even at this level, are not expected to exceed $20 million (and that may be a high estimate). Thus, this program would involve a significant return to the state’s general fund. It would also involve a significant infusion of capital into our farm communities and into our agricultural sector in general.

"All of this would occur while Tennessee would be providing the highest quality medical cannabis that our current knowledge base could accomplish to eligible patients as soon as their physician prescribes this medicine under very controlled production and distribution systems. Thus, all three principal criteria for a successful medical cannabis program would be accomplished at a cost to the patient that is perhaps one-third to one-tenth what they now must pay for illicit cannabis of unknown quality."
----------

Appal,

At this point, we are planning to require that licensed farmers grow in climate-controllable greenhouses (to avoid the mold and spider mite problems that ruined this year's illicit outdoor crop here in Tennessee). With the suggested payment to the farmer, we estimate that a single 50 X 100 greenhouse will gross between $10,000 - $40,000 with a single crop, and perhaps two to three times that amount if the farmer double- or triple-crops in the greenhouse. Licensed farmers will be able to grow as little as one greenhouse but no more than four acres (32 greenhouses). Even with one greenhouse, that level of income blows any other agricultural product out of the water. All of the start-up costs would be covered by the first crop and after that, the income would be substantial and sustainable.

Of course, $500/pound is not $4,000/pound. But with the former cost, you get the local sheriff to assist you with security and you get a "stay out of jail free" card. Those are priceless, in my experience.

As far as the impact of drug gangs, they won't be interested in our program precisely because of the lower income per pound AND because our licensed growers will be required to work with local law enforcement on security-related issues. Besides, if licensed farmers try to divert their crop to the illicit market, they will lose their growing privileges and be subject to prosecution.

It would not bother me a bit to have "cannabis dependence" be one of the future medical conditions that would qualify someone for our Safe Access program. When folks can get high-quality, low-cost cannabis for $60 an ounce, the illicit market will take a major "hit".
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appal_jack Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jan-29-10 05:50 PM
Response to Reply #49
61. Excellent Info
I agree that the legality and quality assurance will be an excellent combination for medical patients and growers alike. Thanks SO MUCH for the work you do!

-app
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prairierose Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jan-29-10 12:17 AM
Response to Original message
40. We have a safe access law being introduced here too...
or maybe they are still looking for the support they need. I hope several of these laws are passed this year.
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Fly by night Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jan-29-10 09:29 AM
Response to Reply #40
50. South Dakotans for Safe Access have collected twice as many signatures as they need!!
You've got some committed volunteers out there. If you need contact info for them, PM me and I'll send it to you.

Good luck, though it will be hard to grow medical-grade cannabis in SD with so much wild hemp growing all over the place out there. It will be hard to keep your medical cannabis plants from being pollinated by the wild hemp, which will cause them to stop growing and put all their energy into worthless seed.
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Swamp Rat Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jan-29-10 12:18 AM
Response to Original message
41. k&r
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truedelphi Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jan-29-10 01:07 AM
Response to Original message
42. Very proud to be Rec Number 58.
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alfredo Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jan-29-10 01:11 AM
Response to Original message
43. Nobody smokes weed in Nashville.
Edited on Fri Jan-29-10 01:16 AM by alfredo
Nobody gets stoned then hikes the nature trail at Lake Radnor, or buys up all the donuts at the Greenhills Kroger.
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slay Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jan-29-10 01:23 AM
Response to Original message
44. K&R - Not only does our government not support medical marijuana, they actively work against
people being able to have legal access to it. Granted less so under Obama - but still a long ways from being readily available for those who desperately need it. Nothing worse that having a terrible condition as well as worrying about getting arrested over some marijuana. It's time we stop being hypocrites, stop sucking up to the Alcohol and Tobacco and Pharmaceutical industries and do the right thing - straight up LEGALIZE IT! :smoke:
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Cetacea Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jan-29-10 01:43 AM
Response to Original message
45. Kicking
Thanks!

:hi:
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bridgit Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jan-29-10 01:53 AM
Response to Original message
46. Sign & Wonders. Signs...
and Wonders, thank you for posting this vital, vital topic - and if you would please check your PM ;)
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Greyhound Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jan-29-10 03:48 AM
Response to Original message
47. Indeed. K&R
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Richard Steele Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jan-29-10 05:53 AM
Response to Original message
48. K&R
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midnight Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jan-29-10 09:36 AM
Response to Original message
51. Thank you for this information. So many people only hear one side of this story
and it is usually from the prospective of those trying to keep Marijuana a class one drug. Those who have not witnessed the most important person in their life being kept from the one drug that would bring them relief can live in the safety above sanity world, those with critical thinking skilsl are done waiting... The last sentence is what needs to be the driving force in this legislation-the patient's best interest.
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Blue_Tires Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jan-29-10 10:36 AM
Response to Original message
52. great, great news!!
Good to see a few more minds are opening up...
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Heidi Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jan-29-10 12:08 PM
Response to Original message
53. Recommended.
:kick:
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defendandprotect Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jan-29-10 01:14 PM
Response to Original message
54. K&R -- "in the patient's best interest" . . .
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mdmc Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jan-29-10 03:57 PM
Response to Original message
56. horray for everything..
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CrownPrinceBandar Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jan-29-10 03:58 PM
Response to Original message
57. K+R!!! Go Dr. Bernie!!!...........
Maybe we'll finally get some sanity in this area.
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tabasco Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jan-29-10 05:14 PM
Response to Original message
59. Is rational government too much to ask for?
Probably.

END CANNABIS PROHIBITION.
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Norrin Radd Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jan-29-10 05:38 PM
Response to Original message
60. kr
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johnaries Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Jan-30-10 01:58 AM
Response to Original message
62. Excellent article!
Oh, please, let some common sense rule for once. And if it can happen here in the Buckle of the Bible Belt, there's hope for the rest of the country.
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antigone382 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jan-31-10 12:21 AM
Response to Original message
63. Kicking


for the cause...


Will contact the state senate here in TN

It's about time for a rational, sane discussion about a safe, effective substance.




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