News (Media Awareness Project) - US MO: Speakers Tout Merits Of Medical Marijuana |
Title: | US MO: Speakers Tout Merits Of Medical Marijuana |
Published On: | 2004-10-24 |
Source: | Columbia Missourian (MO) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-17 20:59:10 |
SPEAKERS TOUT MERITS OF MEDICAL MARIJUANA
Supporters of Propositions 1 and 2 have reached the home stretch.
As Election Day approaches, several groups behind the upcoming marijuana
initiatives sponsored two events this weekend to promote the cause of
medicinal marijuana and decriminalization, as well as other issues
pertinent to the movement.
On Friday, Howard Wooldridge of Law Enforcement Against Prohibition,
federal medical marijuana patient Irvin Rosenfeld and NORML president Keith
Stroup each gave their views on marijuana.
The event was sponsored by the MU Law Chapter of the American Civil
Liberties Union, in collaboration with the MU chapters of the National
Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws and Students for Sensible
Drug Policy.
The second event, Saturday's fourth annual Missouri NORML and Cannabis
Coalition State Conference featured speeches by Wooldridge, Rosenfeld and
Stroup as well as several panels about medical marijuana; a live discussion
of hemp bio-diesel fuel and a demonstration showing how to create it; a
dialogue about Propositions 1 and 2; and a session on marijuana law,
personal rights and community activism.
Proposition 1 calls for the dismissal of charges against seriously ill
people who obtain and use marijuana on a doctor's recommendation.
Proposition 2 looks to reduce the penalties of marijuana possession of less
than 35 grams from a misdemeanor to a maximum fine of $250. Defendants
would be tried in municipal court instead of state court and would not
serve jail time.
Wooldridge, a former Michigan police officer for 15 years, said he once
spent six months riding his horse from Georgia to Oregon "like a Paul
Revere, trying to spread the alarm about the harm caused by the war on drugs."
"We in law enforcement are a mosquito on the butt of an elephant; we've
never made a difference (in the Drug War), and we never will," he said.
"We' ve arrested millions of drug dealers, and there's always someone to
take their place."
Rosenfeld spoke from a patient's perspective. He suffers from a disease
that causes bone tumors to grow and develop at any time. He smokes up to 12
marijuana cigarettes a day as prescribed by the federal government to treat
pain, muscle spasms, tears, hemorrhaging and joint inflammation.
"The problem now is medicine is being decided by politics," he said. "The
government does not want to know how well it (marijuana) works; they're
scared of the results."
Stroup spoke from a lawyer's perspective. He founded NORML in 1970 and is
in his second stint as the head of the organization.
He said marijuana smokers must "come out of the closet" for marijuana laws
to be changed.
"We are productive citizens who raise families and contribute to society,"
he said. "We need to contact representatives and let them know that this is
how we feel; we're gradually winning the war and with the help of tens of
millions of smokers, we will win."
Supporters of Propositions 1 and 2 have reached the home stretch.
As Election Day approaches, several groups behind the upcoming marijuana
initiatives sponsored two events this weekend to promote the cause of
medicinal marijuana and decriminalization, as well as other issues
pertinent to the movement.
On Friday, Howard Wooldridge of Law Enforcement Against Prohibition,
federal medical marijuana patient Irvin Rosenfeld and NORML president Keith
Stroup each gave their views on marijuana.
The event was sponsored by the MU Law Chapter of the American Civil
Liberties Union, in collaboration with the MU chapters of the National
Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws and Students for Sensible
Drug Policy.
The second event, Saturday's fourth annual Missouri NORML and Cannabis
Coalition State Conference featured speeches by Wooldridge, Rosenfeld and
Stroup as well as several panels about medical marijuana; a live discussion
of hemp bio-diesel fuel and a demonstration showing how to create it; a
dialogue about Propositions 1 and 2; and a session on marijuana law,
personal rights and community activism.
Proposition 1 calls for the dismissal of charges against seriously ill
people who obtain and use marijuana on a doctor's recommendation.
Proposition 2 looks to reduce the penalties of marijuana possession of less
than 35 grams from a misdemeanor to a maximum fine of $250. Defendants
would be tried in municipal court instead of state court and would not
serve jail time.
Wooldridge, a former Michigan police officer for 15 years, said he once
spent six months riding his horse from Georgia to Oregon "like a Paul
Revere, trying to spread the alarm about the harm caused by the war on drugs."
"We in law enforcement are a mosquito on the butt of an elephant; we've
never made a difference (in the Drug War), and we never will," he said.
"We' ve arrested millions of drug dealers, and there's always someone to
take their place."
Rosenfeld spoke from a patient's perspective. He suffers from a disease
that causes bone tumors to grow and develop at any time. He smokes up to 12
marijuana cigarettes a day as prescribed by the federal government to treat
pain, muscle spasms, tears, hemorrhaging and joint inflammation.
"The problem now is medicine is being decided by politics," he said. "The
government does not want to know how well it (marijuana) works; they're
scared of the results."
Stroup spoke from a lawyer's perspective. He founded NORML in 1970 and is
in his second stint as the head of the organization.
He said marijuana smokers must "come out of the closet" for marijuana laws
to be changed.
"We are productive citizens who raise families and contribute to society,"
he said. "We need to contact representatives and let them know that this is
how we feel; we're gradually winning the war and with the help of tens of
millions of smokers, we will win."
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