Pubdate: Wed, 28 Mar 2001 Source: Tempest Magazine (SD) Copyright: 2001 Tempest Magazine, Inc. Contact: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1576 Note: Published every two weeks; Sioux Falls alternative press Author: Bob Newland Note: Bob Newland, a publisher, lives near Hermosa, in the Black Hills. WE HAVE TO THINK OF THE CHILDREN Politics: The Ceaseless Argument Over Who Gets To Do What To Whom, For How Long, And Against What Degree Of Dissent. When Senator Ron Volesky (D-Huron) introduced a medical cannabis bill in the South Dakota legislature in January, he specified the appropriate medical conditions for marijuana therapy as "glaucoma and nausea from cancer chemotherapy", thus excluding all other medical conditions for which cannabis might have an application. I testified in the Senate State Affairs Committee that the conditions under which one might use cannabis legally should be broadened to all conditions in which patient and doctor concur in the therapeutic use of cannabis. Privately, Senator Fred Whiting (R-Rapid City) said to me, "Perhaps you should proceed incrementally. We can add other conditions later." Since it became obvious that we would not be able to add other qualifying conditions to Volesky's bill, I decided that a small step was better than no step, and supported the bill as it was submitted. During his comments as to why he was voting against the bill, Whiting said, "By its principal lobbyist's own testimony, this bill doesn't go far enough. Therefore I vote 'no'." Whiting's ability to contort, bait-and-switch, and twist logic to an unrecognizable tangle, then smile an insipid smile and say, "We have to think of the children", comes as no surprise to those of us who have watched politicians at all levels spew garbage regarding cannabis issues for thirty years. What's frightening is that Whiting and others like him use the same kind of incisive thinking, and non-existent commitment to principle, on all issues, many of which become law. In 1996, Proposition 215, California's Compassionate Use Act passed at the polls with 56 percent of the vote. It plainly and simply states that California's criminal code concerning marijuana possession or use or cultivation does not apply to people possessing, using or cultivating if they have a doctor's recommendation to use marijuana therapeutically. It was worded specifically to make it illegal to even arrest such people. It was also worded specifically "to encourage the federal and state governments to implement a plan to provide for the safe and affordable distribution of marijuana to all patients in medical need of marijuana." The federal government's response to the 5,382,915 Californians who voted "yes" on 215 was to threaten to prosecute physicians who suggested to their patients that marijuana might make them feel better, might extend their lives considerably. Some California city and county governments have obeyed the law. Some other counties -- Placer, notably -- have been more barbaric in their persecution of sick, disabled and dying people since 215 passed than they were before. In 1999, the Institute of Medicine (essentially a federal agency) released the report in which it was contracted to "assess the science base" for claims made that marijuana had therapeutic value. The contracting agency? The Office of National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP) -- the "drug czar", retired general Barry McCaffrey. The gist of the report? Marijuana has therapeutic value. The result? McCaffrey ridiculed and buried the report, which had cost $1,000,000.00 to produce. Gen'l McCaffrey, I know a few, . . . well, several, South Dakota senators with whom I'm sure you'd enjoy having a drink. In 1997, as part of research for a book on medical marijuana, Californian Peter McWilliams helped fund a friend's (Todd McCormick) marijuana growing operation. After the Drug Enforcement Agency seized McCormick's operation, where they found over 4,000 marijuana plants, they raided McWilliams' house and arrested him on charges of manufacturing and distribution of a controlled substance. McWilliams was the author of the 1971 book, How to Survive the Loss of a Love, which has sold over two million copies. Another best-seller, Ain't Nobody's Business if You Do, illustrating the ludicrousness of criminalizing adult consensual behavior, was released in 1993. He was at work on a new book, A Question of Compassion -- An AIDS-Cancer Patient Explores Medical Marijuana, when he was arrested and charged. The DEA took all of McWilliams' equipment and books, including everything he needed to continue writing his newest book. McWilliams had AIDS and was undergoing treatment for non-Hodgkins lymphoma. He smoked cannabis several times a day to quell the nausea caused by the cancer treatment and to suppress the AIDS symptoms. His doctor testified that he believed McWilliams' life had been extended to that point by marijuana, and that marijuana was necessary to continue that extension. The federal prosecutors asked for, and received from the federal judge, a ban on McWilliams being able to mention those facts during his trial. Barred from presenting a defense, in order have a chance to avoid prison, or even be granted bail while awaiting sentencing, McWilliams was force to plead to manufacture of a controlled substance. Conditions of his bail included regular tests for marijuana use. A positive test would have meant immediate incarceration and a death sentence. As a result, McWilliams was subject to sudden, violent attacks of nausea and vomiting. It was principally these attacks for which marijuana had proven effective, and for which nothing else was effective. In June 14, 2000, still awaiting sentencing, Peter McWilliams, now bedridden and bankrupt, was bathing when he suffered a nausea attack, began convulsively vomiting, slipped under the water and drowned. The federal prosecutors said they were "saddened" by his death. The monstrosity of such barbarism makes it hard for this South Dakota cowboy to grasp. Can fellow human beings be this cruel? I mean fellow educated human beings, schooled in the principles of justice for the purpose of administering it as a federal judge or prosecutor. Can they -- the cream of our crop -- be this cruel? Along with all those senators and representatives for the past thirty years? Along with the American Medical Association? Along with the Food & Drug Administration? Apparently. In the Senate State Affairs committee hearings on Volesky's bill, some senators expressed concern over the "confusion" caused in other states by the "conflict" between federal and state laws and over the fact that the "guidelines were too broad", that "anyone could get a marijuana recommendation ." What they mean, of course, is that, in California, law enforcement chooses not to obey the law when it suits them. Oregon, Washington, Arizona, Nevada, California, Colorado, Maine, and Hawaii now have laws allowing medical use of cannabis. Somewhere in the area of 13 million people have now voted to allow sick people to use cannabis. From nowhere but California do we hear stories of such "confusion". That's because there is no confusion. If a person has a doctor's recommendation, his possession, use, and cultivation is legal. Period. Why does the federal government -- along with a wide variety of its lackeys -- insist on denying the obvious? What is so frightening about admitting that an herb, given us by God, might have some value? Virtually all federal agencies with any law enforcement authority at all have lobbied for, and received, funding for drug interdiction units. Even the Department of Immigration and Naturalization has drug-SWAT teams. You saw one in action rescuing Elian Gonzales from his cousin. Virtually all federal, state and local law enforcement departments get part of the loot when drug asset-forfeitures are imposed. Most drug asset-forfeiture is connected to cannabis. Over half of the two million people now in prison are there only for drug possession or sale. Well over half of them are charged for marijuana only. In California, the prison guard PAC is the best-funded lobbying group in the state. To admit that Congress was wrong when it proclaimed that marijuana has "no medical value" might lead to folks concluding that Congress might be wrong about some other stuff, too. Worse yet, it might possibly lead to folks concluding that marijuana has some medical use. Folks might might start questioning the affordability -- and advisability -- of doubling prison space every ten years or so. Funding for the continual flow of all those new surveillance toys to the Sheriff's department in Sturgis or Olivet might slow down. There never was a factual basis for any reason ever given to criminalize the cannabis plant. Yet, since the Marijuana Tax Act of 1937 (which the AMA opposed at the time), over 16 million man-years have been served in prison in this country for the crimes of possession, use or sale of cannabis. This rivals the records of so-called "repressive" regimes in so-called "regressive" countries like Russia, China, Korea, et. al. The judicial murder of Peter McWilliams in California rivals the worst stories about government suppression anywhere. Lucky we are that South Dakota prosecutors, judges and legislators are less vindictive and more open to the supplications of logic and truth than are those judges and prosecutors and legislators in California. They haven't yet killed anyone. Except maybe that girl at Plankinton. And maybe a coupla others . . . . See more about medical cannabis in South Dakota at http://www.sodaknorml.org/. Bob Newland's journey is published at http://www.nakedgov.com/. MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk