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News (Media Awareness Project) - US MD: PUB LTE: Medical Marijuana Decisions Shouldn't Be Made
Title:US MD: PUB LTE: Medical Marijuana Decisions Shouldn't Be Made
Published On:2003-07-10
Source:Frederick News Post (MD)
Fetched On:2008-01-20 01:59:38
MEDICAL MARIJUANA DECISIONS SHOULDN'T BE MADE BY JUDGES

Having testified in support of Maryland's medical marijuana bill, I
disagree with Tom Riley ("Marijuana fight to be continued," July 2) that
resubmitting our legislation is a "Trojan horse" for legalizing drugs. My
interest in this issue is personal.

Before turning to cannabis, I tried dozens of dangerous drugs, prescribed
by my doctors, to ease the symptoms of Crohn's disease. Even if one of the
more dangerous drugs had worked, why should I be arrested for choosing what
DEA Law Judge Francis Young characterized as the "safest therapeutically
active substance known to man"?

Only a willfully ignorant or cruelly deceptive leader could deny that
marijuana is medicine, with mountains of hard science supporting it. In
addition, where cannabis has been regulated, they're seeing decreases in
substance abuse, overdoses and crime. Don't we deserve the same advantages?

I can agree with Mr. Riley in is his criticism of our bill "It puts the
medical determination ... in the hands of a judge." This is why I'll be
back in Annapolis to testify again next year. Medical decisions belong in
patients' hands, not a judge's, and certainly far from the hands of Mr. Riley.

For too long, we've been operating under the assumption that our leaders
would not mislead us about such an important issue. As Tony Walters said,
"Fool me once, shame on you, fool me twice, shame on me." Shame on Mr.
Walters for fooling us. Now that we know better; it's time to act
responsibly and stop arresting patients for taking their medicine.

ERIN HILDEBRANDT

Smithsburg
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