Pubdate: Thu, 30 Apr 2009
Source: Eugene Weekly (OR)
Copyright: 2009 Eugene Weekly
Contact:  http://www.eugeneweekly.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/136
Author: Rick Levin

SMOKE SIGNALS

Changes Might Be Coming for Oregon's Medical Marijuana Act

Narcotics have been systematically scapegoated and demonized. The 
idea that anyone can use drugs and escape a horrible fate is anathema 
to these idiots. I predict in the near future right wingers will use 
drug hysteria as a pretext to set up an international police 
apparatus. But I'm an old man and I may not live to see a final 
solution.  -- Tom the Preacher in Drugstore Cowboy, 1989

Saturday, High Noon

It's an odd but fitting sign that this time, the smoke preceded the 
fire. When folks around Eugene sparked up on April 20 -- that would 
be 4:20, the apocryphal National Marijuana Holiday allegedly named 
for the after-school meeting time designated by a clutch of teenage 
stoners in San Rafael in the '70s -- they were, consciously or not, 
sending up a smoke signal of things to come for advocates of medical marijuana.

First of all is the Global Medical Marijuana March at "high noon" 
Saturday, May 2, in front of the old federal building at 7th and 
Pearl. Other events are happening in Salem and Portland. The Eugene 
event will feature a number of notable speakers, including Elvy 
Musikka, who has been receiving 300 federally sanctioned and supplied 
joints a month since 1988, Dr. Arthur Livermore, a member of the 
American Alliance for Medical Cannabis. Also addressing the rally 
will be Dan Koozer, head of the Willamette Valley chapter of the 
National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Law (NORML).

This year's march anticipates a veritable firestorm of initiatives 
and bills knocking on the door of the Legislature for the next two 
years at least. According to a WV-NORML press release, "there are 35 
bills relating to marijuana in the Oregon State Legislature this 
session, and there are more coming."

The Oregon Medical Marijuana Act has been on the books for a decade, 
and much of the proposed legislation seeks to clarify or clean up or 
strengthen or gut or eradicate altogether whatever benefits OMMA 
offers its beneficiaries.

If the state and country have inched closer to ending what some 
advocates call "Prohibition Part II," still, all is not mellow in the 
land of legalized medical marijuana. When it comes to pot, it's 
politics as usual.

A Divided Movement

"The story you're about to write is completely bullshit." This is as 
good a place to start as any, with one of the first sentences spoken 
to me over the phone by Jerry Wade, who serves as secretary for the 
Stormy Ray Cardholder's Foundation (SRCF). Wade was responding -- in 
a kind of preemptive strike, since no specific questions had yet been 
asked -- to a request that his organization respond to the scads of 
criticism leveled at SRCF by other organizations in the movement.

Stormy Ray was one of the chief petitioners for Measure 67, which in 
its voter-driven success became OMMA. Ray, who in 1985 was diagnosed 
with multiple sclerosis, is one of countless patients whose symptoms 
have been relieved by ingesting cannabis, and her foundation is 
currently behind the push to enact Senate Bill 388, which was voted 
down last week but is expected to return in some form.

According to Wade, SB 388, which received a hearing in Salem April 
20, focused exclusively on the needs and rights of patients who use 
medical marijuana. The bill, he said, sought to prevent abuses on the 
supply side of the issue by ensuring clear and legal access to 
well-regulated and well-defined marijuana producers who are growing 
pot solely for patients.

Now, as for the "bullshit": Numerous individuals and organizations 
have claimed, in so many words, that SRCF is a puppet and a front for 
The Man; and that the organization, by working so closely with law 
enforcement and politicians, is a slave to power; and that it does 
not represent the collective interest of the medical marijuana movement.

Anthony Johnson of Voter Power said: "It is a shame that the Stormy 
Ray Cardholder's Foundation, an organization with just a handful of 
members, has been propped up and used by the law enforcement lobby to 
pass laws that actually harm sick and disabled patients."

The actual harm being done, Johnson claimed, is "by conning 
legislators that compromises are being made while patients are only 
going to be harmed by proposals that reduce the amount of medicine 
available and will lead to more resources being wasted on the arrest 
and jailing of patients and their providers."

Koozer from WV-NORML said that the legalization movement in general 
is "appalled" that Ray has "worked her way into being the only group 
that law enforcement will deal with and speak with." In general, 
Koozer added, it's confusing that legislators are paying so much 
attention to law enforcement, which he called "addicted" to the money 
it makes waging the so-called War on Drugs. He warns further that 
it's a dangerous thing when law enforcement is involved in the making 
of laws, a process typically, if not constitutionally, delegated to 
the legislative branch of government.

Wade objects to such assessments. What Ray's harshest critics refer 
to as compromise or plain old selling out, Wade might instead call 
being pragmatic. He says that too many organizations are hitching 
their wagons to the issue of medical marijuana to trick voters with 
"backdoor legislation" that seeks to legalize marijuana across the 
board. What's more, he says, the current system is too prone to 
abuse, with patients being overcharged or having their card-holding 
status used as a "fence" for growers and dealers whose supply goes to 
non-card-holding recreational stoners.

"We are truly fighting to keep this program in the hands of the 
patients," Wade said of SB 388, which he added "will have no effect 
on patients." What it would have done, Wade adds, is stop 
"stockpiling and hoarding" by those growers who abuse the current 
law. The bill explicitly defined garden size and growth amounts and 
created "an easy-to-understand manual about patient's rights" where 
"all medicine produced is the property of the patient."

Essentially, Wade says, his organization has worked hard to close 
some of these "loopholes" that make the law as it stands -- and as 
many legalization advocates would like to see it remain -- an easy 
way for illegitimate growers to skirt the law. "I'm not saying all 
growers and caregivers are bad," he says, adding that he guesses 
about "90 percent are legal." It's only those few who are "giving the 
entire program a black eye."

Initiative 28

Voter Power director John Sajo, who is leading the petition drive to 
put Initiative 28 in front of the voters in 2010, says that what OMMA 
has done "is create a cesspool of corruption of a different form," 
where patients are just as guilty as abusing growers as vice versa. 
Many patients he's seen, he says, have passed their card-certified 
marijuana to other, non-card-carrying individuals -- sometimes right 
in front of Sajo, who is himself a certified medical marijuana grower.

The main difference between SB 388 and I-28 is that -- while both 
deal primarily with the supply side of the issue -- the former 
purports to protect patients by tweaking OMMA with better-defined 
controls on marijuana growers and distribution, while the latter 
argues for the creation of a non-profit dispensary system that acts 
as a regulated middleman between patients and growers. Both claim to 
clean up corruption: the one, SB 388, by tightening the one-to-one 
correspondence between patient and supplier; the other, I-28, by 
modeling the system on controlled but consumer-driven economics.

Sajo says that the real issue driving new legislation, however, is 
the "inability of the Oregon Legislature to get a handle on the 
medical marijuana issue." He says that, unlike every other form of 
commerce in a capitalist society, "medical marijuana is all supposed 
to be done without the exchange of money," which he says is absurd.

Even more absurd, Sajo says, is creating a one-to-one correspondence 
where individual patients are dependent on a single grower and his or 
her schedule, harvest and reliability. Here he offers a poignant 
analogy: "It's insane ... if we tried to do food like that in this 
country, half the people would starve."

What I-28 would create, Sajo says, is a "supply system where patients 
can go get their medicine" in the form of a nonprofit dispensary 
operating on the model of a regulated free market economy. A sort of 
sliding-scale system would be implemented for more needy or destitute 
patients, with some even receiving free medicine, while other 
patients would pay what the market demands. This system, Sajo adds, 
would be subject to controls such as inspections and health 
standards, and a 10 percent tax on sales would fund the overall program.

"A farmer who's good at growing marijuana shouldn't be limited to 
growing for four patients," Sajo says. "They should be encouraged to 
grow for as many as they can." Under I-28, which so far has collected 
some 35,000 signatures, a grower would pay $1,000 for a license and 
would be equally subjected to zoning and inspections.

Jim Greig, a long-standing medical marijuana advocate who suffers 
from a debilitating from of arthritis that keeps him all but 
bedridden, calls I-28 "as close to perfect as we're going to get"-- 
at least until the federal government gets past the "bold-faced lie" 
of giving marijuana the same controlled substance scheduling as 
heroin. "What other prescription drug do you need to get a hundred 
dollar permit to carry it?" Greig asks rhetorically.

For Greig, every existing problem with medical marijuana legislation 
starts at the federal level, and the only solution, he adds, is 
education, which would challenge the ridiculously outdated "Reefer 
Madness" mentality and politicized fear tactics of the War on Drugs 
while also alerting the public to the substantial and ever-increasing 
amount of scientific data that proves the medicinal properties of 
cannabis. "Decisions are supposed to be made on scientific fact, not 
ideologies," Greig says.

Collateral Damage

C.J., a 50-year-old Eugene native, applied this year for his first 
card to hold medical marijuana, which he uses to ease pain and relive 
the symptoms of nausea. With a long list of health problems -- 
resulting primarily from a head injury and including the removal of 
his pituitary gland -- C.J. says he finds it frustrating that the 
federal government doesn't recognize marijuana as a "legitimate medication."

Having found the synthetic THC substitute Marinol a poor substitute 
- -- "All it did was give me bloodshot eyes and dry my eye sockets out" 
- -- C.J. says he considers himself a kind of collateral damage of the 
War on Drugs, which he calls "a conspiracy against the American people."

At this point, he said, with the growth of privatized prisons and a 
vast apparatus built up to combat illegal drugs, the only people 
truly profiting from drug prohibition are criminals, the government 
and terrorist cells being funded by the trade in Afghanistan opium. 
As for the U.S. and its current policies, "They're feeding the 
machine they're fighting against," C.J. says. "It's a conspiracy."

Koozer of WV-NORML also supports the dispensary initiative, though he 
says the larger issue here is individual liberty and complete 
decriminalization. "It's a freedom issue," he says, "your right to be 
able to do what you want with your body and your life."

Echoing the sentiments of so many others involved in the movement to 
legalize marijuana, whether for medical or recreational use, Koozer 
admits he's sometimes discouraged by all the competing voices out 
there and the infighting among organizations. "There is so much 
dysfunctionality within the movement, it's extremely frustrating," he 
says, adding that improving the public perception, and misperception, 
of the movement is an "ongoing problem."

"We're always trying to improve our credibility," Koozer says. "It's 
more than just getting high. It's more about rope than dope. We just 
keep trying to plead with people to come together and work together. 
The problem is, we're just preaching to the choir."

All this over a plant. As Koozer puts it: "Why don't we all get 
behind something that's really nasty, like poison oak?"

A New Optimism

Nonetheless, many folks involved in the current push for new 
legislation express an optimism, albeit cautious, about both the near 
and distant future, which some have called brighter for the election 
of Barack Obama -- or the ejection of Bush ideology, however one 
cares to view it.

"Now is a good time to take medical cannabis issues to the people 
because they are ahead of the politicians," Johnson of Voter Power 
says, citing recent polls that found 63 percent of Oregon voters 
supporting OMMA and, more specifically, 59 percent supporting I-28. 
And, he says, "the people are learning the truth across the nation," 
pointing to recent cannabis reform laws passed in both Michigan and 
Massachusetts.

Despite the fact that "our program is under attack every legislative 
session," Greig says he is feeling optimistic about the success of 
I-28 in Oregon. "We got an early enough start," he says.

"Things are really looking up," says Wade of SRCF. "In the federal 
government we'll see some sort of federal legislation here in a 
couple of years. Once we kind of get through this [current 
legislative session], I have a feeling polices are going to change."

A Proclamation

Eugene Mayor Kitty Piercy has signed a proclamation declaring the 
week of April 30 to May 6 as "Medical Marijuana Awareness Week" in Eugene.

The proclamation notes that currently 25,000 patients and more than 
2,900 doctors participate in Oregon's medical marijuana program and 
that "Pre-clinical and clinical trials indicate that cannabinoids are 
useful in controlling Alzheimer's disease, cancer, chronic pain, 
diabetes, GI disorders, hepatitis C, multiple sclerosis, 
osteoporosis, rheumatoid arthritis and sleep apnea."

The document concludes: "Marijuana has a history of thousands of 
years of safe use without any recorded deaths attributed to its use, 
and all citizens deserve the right to know the truth about cannabis."

Greatest Story Never Told?

Hemp and marijuana activists in Lane County are talking about the 
potential healing qualities of hemp oil that can be ingested orally 
or rubbed on. The dark, sticky oil contains THC, making it currently 
illegal in this country for general use.

A story by Raymond Cushing at www.alternet.org/story/9257 titled "Pot 
Shrinks Tumors" says, "The term medical marijuana took on dramatic 
new meaning in February 2000 when researchers in Madrid announced 
they had destroyed incurable brain tumors in rats by injecting them 
with THC, the active ingredient in cannabis."

The AlterNet story made the "Top Censored" stories of 2000, based on 
the fact that mainstream media ignored the Madrid study along with 
research on THC and cancer going back to 1974.

Today, most information on the subject can only be found through word 
of mouth and online. A free 55-minute movie called Run From the Cure: 
The Rick Simpson Story can be watched at www.PhoenixTearsMovie.com 
though not every computer can download it. Excerpts from the Canadian 
film can be found on YouTube by searching for "Run From the Cure." 
More information is available at www.PhoenixTears.ca

Testimonials on the film include people cured of various forms of 
cancer, migraine headaches, intestinal problems, diabetes and 
multiple other health issues. Many of the cured patients reportedly 
suffered from terminal illnesses.

"This oil is ideally made of one pound of Indica bud which makes two 
ounces of oil and reportedly can cure cancer in three months or 
less," says Kathy Ging of Eugene who has been touting the film 
through her email list.

Ging says the process of making the hemp oil involves heat and 
solvents and can be dangerous. "This is why it needs to be legalized 
and made in a lab for scientific testing of dosage, strength, etc."

In the film, Rick Simpson says one of the primary reasons marijuana 
is illegal as medicine in many states is that the powerful 
pharmaceutical industry sees it as competition and can't make any 
money from it. "No patent means no money," he says.

"This may someday be known as the greatest story never told, until 
now," says Ging.
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MAP posted-by: Richard Lake