Senior Moments

Marijuana as Medicine

Legalizing Marijuana for medicinal purposes, it sounds so compassionate, but should you support it?   Learn True Compassion  Click here

Who should decide what medical remedies are safe and affective; the Food and Drug Administration, which approves all other medications and products for consumption, or voters?

Think about it!


"Keep in mind that we don’t eat moldy bread to get penicillin, we don’t chew foxglove flowers to get digitalis, we don’t eat poppy seeds to get morphine and we don’t suck venom from snakes to get anti-venom. The marijuana plant is not medicine"

 

There  are  many movements across the nation that promote the "safe use of drugs".  Some of the proponents of these movements  contend that the war on drugs is not working and seek 'reform' in drug education. Millions of dollars have been put into the pro-legalization movement.

Two Michigan driven and grass roots financed efforts to add the approval of recreational and medicinal drug use to  state wide ballots failed over the past few years. A third attempt (apparently spearheaded out of state), also failed.

Local initiatives in Michigan have been more successful.  Voters in Detroit, Ann Arbor, Ferndale, Flint, and Traverse City supported medical marijuana proposals. Such ordinances are almost meaningless however, because use of marijuana for whatever the reason is still  subject to state laws and enforcement by state and federal authorities.

More recently, November 28, 2006, lawmakers held a public hearing on a bill that would make Michigan the 12th state in the nation to legalize medicinal marijuana. The bill never came out of committee.  Governmental Operations Committee Chair Leon Drolet said: “Next step is going to have to be citizen initiative because I don't believe that the legislature is going to address the issue." The bills sponsor democratic representative Lamar Lemmons says he will re-introduce it in 2007 when the democrats come into power.

Also in November 2006,the Michigan Board of State Canvassers approved the form of a legislative petition proposed by an Eaton Rapids-based group backing a proposal to legalize the smoking and growing of marijuana for anyone over the age of 17. The measure would make it legal for those 18 and older to use marijuana on private property. Those found using the drug in public would be guilty of a civil infraction punishable by a 50-dollar fine. The measure also would allow people to grow marijuana at their residences. Supporters of the measure must gather about 304-thousand valid petition signatures to get on the 2008 ballot. It is not likely that enough signatures will be gathered to get the number necessary.

Last year,  2007, Michigan's Coalition for Compassionate Care  launched a petition drive in support of a medical-marijuana legalization plan, the Detroit News reported May 24, 2007.

In early December 2007, 500,000 signatures were collected and sent with the plan to the state legislature.  If lawmakers don't approve the Michigan Medicinal Marijuana Act, the proposal could appear on the statewide ballot in 2008. The group needed to collect at least 304,101 valid signatures to put the plan before voters.

This act calls for patients to legally be able to use medical marijuana to treat cancer pain, multiple sclerosis, or other conditions. "This is a narrowly drafted initiative," said campaign spokesperson Dianne Byrum. "If you are going to use medicinal marijuana, it must be under a doctor's recommendation. Patients deserve to get relief from their terrible suffering without going to jail."

Information on what persons or organizations makes up the "Michigan Coalition for Compassionate Care" is currently unavailable on their website but the Michigan campaign is orchestrated by the Marijuana Policy Project headquartered in Washington DC.   MPP also reports that a major philanthropist has committed to match the first $3.0 million that MPP can raise from donors world wide. 

On March 3, 2008, MPP's Michigan campaign committee announced that Michigan state officials had certified that there were enough petitions signed to send this initiative to the voters in November of 2008.

 

Revealing the Medical Marijuana Scam
  • Speaking Out Against Legalization
  • Why marijuana is such a dangerous drug
  • Marijuana Initatives,
  • Marijuana Resource Page
  • Police Chief's Guide to the Legalization Issue
  • The Illinois Marijuana Lectures
  • Marijuana-Cigarettes Comparison
  • Statement on Harm Reduction Policies
  • Marijuana and the effect on the brain
  • So Who is really incarcerated for marijuana?
  • Age of first use and Mental Illness  
  • Marijuana Use 1999-2001
  • BE INFORMED
    Effects of Marijuana
    Young adults still get high on pot
    Fighting the big money influence
    Links
    Drug Free America Foundation
    S.O.S.  Save our Society from Drugs
    Drug Watch International
    Parents - The Anti-Drug.com

    On any given day, half a million teens get high
     

     

     

    Crimes vs Seniors Seniors are often targeted with specific crimes.
    Identity Theft can happen to you even when you you do everything you can to protect yourself.
    Links Sharing what was shared with me and my favorite links
    Medical Marijuana. Is it really up to the voters to decide?
    Oxycontin - Prescription pain medicine can become addictive

    Message to Parents and Grandparents:

    WAKE UP TO THE RISKS OF MARIJUANA!! 

    TWO PERSPECTIVES FROM
    MEDICAL DOCTORS

    Marijuana as Medicine

    Legalizing Medical Marijuana

    "No sound scientific studies have supported medical use of smoked marijuana for treatment in the United States, and no animal or human data support the safety or efficacy of smoked marijuana for general medical use. "

    New way to separate the therapeutic benefits of cannabis from its mood-altering side-effects

     

    The medical marijuana movement is not a compassionate movement whose main goal is to relieve pain and suffering.  I believe that almost all of those who actively support the legalization of medical marijuana also support decriminalizing marijuana for recreational purposes.  Before supporting any ballot proposal, please find out who is behind the movement. Support for medical marijuana puts your children and grandchildren more at risk!

    According to the Institute of Medicine, there is no future in smoked marijuana as medicine. However, the prescription drug Marinol—a legal and safe version of medical marijuana which isolates the active ingredient of THC—has been studied and approved by the Food & Drug Administration as safe medicine. The difference is that you have to get a prescription for Marinol from a licensed physician. You can’t buy it on a street corner, and you don’t smoke it.  Patients would not even need a prescription from the doctor, merely a "recommendation". 

     More kids use marijuana than any other illicit drug, by far. Yes, cigarette smoking and alcohol consumption are legal yet could be harmful, but do we want our children to be exposed to yet another danger?  Marijuana use can lead to a host of significant health, social, learning and behavioral problems at a crucial time in a young person's development. The drug is more potent than it used to be and its effects can be more intense. Getting high can also impair judgment, which can lead to risky decisions on issues like sex, criminal activity or riding with someone who is driving while high.

    And don't be fooled by popular beliefs. Kids can get hooked on pot. Research shows that marijuana use can lead to addiction.

    Did you know…

    ·         In the last decade, the number of 8th graders who have used marijuana has doubled.

    ·         More teens enter treatment for marijuana abuse each year than for all other illicit drugs combined.

    ·         Your words and actions matter. The earlier you talk to your kids about marijuana, the less likely they will be to use it.

    Time and again, kids say their parents are the single most important influence when it comes to drugs. So this message needs to start with you. Kids need to hear how risky marijuana use can be. They need to know how damaging it can be to their lives. And they need to begin by listening to someone they trust.

    If you're not talking to your kids about the risks of marijuana, they might be getting the wrong message.

    Get the facts about marijuana at www.theantidrug.com/marijuana. 

     

     

    Copyright 2007  Alex Arends