Pubdate: Thu, 27 Mar 2014 Source: Rome News-Tribune (GA) Copyright: 2014 Rome News-Tribune Contact: http://www.romenews-tribune.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1716 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal) POLITICS HAS GONE TO POT GEORGIANS love to kick Alabama around as a model of backward thinking, and not always good-naturedly either. They had best change their tone, at least regarding matters involving simple human concern for others. Perhaps it was to avoid embarrassment ( for Georgia), but it is somewhat amazing that little to no mention was made, either during the noisy medical marijuana debate in the recent General Assembly session or after the defeat of this measure to help seizure-plagued children wheeled before TV cameras almost daily during the argument, that the Alabama legislature had just done this very thing - the same week. The measure unanimously passed in both houses, and their governor has already said he will sign it. Not only that but Georgia's beaten-down measure was forced to cohabit with a separate but similar issue - requiring insurance companies to offer some autism treatment for children 6 and younger - that was of equally worthwhile, compassionate content and also went down. Georgia's very-backward representatives, apparently a majority of those elected, kicked those kids to the side of the road, too. Ahem! Alabama approved that back in 2012. Oh, well ... still got Mississippi to look down upon, right? Perhaps not for long. Mississippi is one of 15 additional states actively discussing the marijuana issue with quite favorable initial votes in its legislature. Moreover, as few seem aware, Mississippi is where the federal government grows its own marijuana crop to support research into the plant's possible medical benefits. And Alabama is about to become the 23rd state to approve medical marijuana - which in this instance and usage is an oil extract of the plant that does not cause any of the "pot smoking" symptoms. ONE ALMOST expects Georgia politicians, who love to pretend they are physicians but typically act more like witch doctors, to next pass a bill mandating the use of leeches before antibiotics can be authorized. Alabama's new law, by the way, was like Georgia's proposal in that it did not make this legal but rather provided a "defense of necessity" for parents/ guardians found in possession of a substance that it remained technically illegal to possess or transport into the state. It also required the treated children to be patients of the University of Alabama at Birmingham or its affiliated Children's of Alabama hospital. And then the Alabama legislature - Georgia politicians take note - added $ 1 million in funding so that UAB could do a neurology research project into cannabidiol oil. As for the autism portion, supported by some of the most powerful figures in the Senate, it failed in the House apparently as insurance-company lobbyists were pleading that it was unaffordable and would force them to raise premiums for everybody. Actually, that estimate turns out to be roughly 50 cents as the proposal was sharply defined. It would only have applied to children younger than 6, could be used only for an approach known as applied behavioral therapy that is providing good results, included a cap of $ 35,000 per patient per year, offered an "opt out" provision for employers and HMOs if it raised premiums by more than 1 percent, and exempted small employers. AUTISM is a varied and growing problem needing urgent addressing - including finding causes and prevention. It has more than doubled in the past 20 years among children in the United States, perhaps partly due to better detection. The rate of cases ... mild to severe ... is currently listed as 1 in every 88 young children. Just for comparative purposes, regarding another childhood affliction long covered by insurance companies without a murmur of opposition, the incidence of cleft palate/ lips is put at about 1 per 700. Most cases require multiple surgeries over the growing years with single operations apparently ranging from $ 5,000 to $ 30,000 and "grand total" bills able to run into the hundreds of thousands of dollars. One assumes most legislators had been told such information but that in the House, where Republican party politics is king and common sense a mere handmaiden, it was ignored for fear of appearing to impose a healthcare mandate - just like that supposedly evil Obamacare on which unyielding opposition so many re-election hopes appear pinned. The General Assembly creating a "study committee" on medical marijuana to cover the badly exposed rear ends of so many of is members hardly should save them from receiving a good kick from the electorate in the same place. These topics, particularly involving the most innocent and weakest among us that the "herd" is supposed to protect at all costs, have nothing to do with medical marijuana for seizures or treatment of autism. Public-opinion polls showed overwhelming support of passage of these measures. The herd is well; the full-of-bulls pretending to leadership are not. IT IS APPALLING, and now broadcasts nationwide the worst of "backward" impressions for Georgia, that the General Assembly failed to positively deal with this topic. In Alabama, apparent land of enlightened politicians and populace, the primary sponsor of the medical marijuana measure was Rep. Allen Farley of Jefferson County (Birmingham). Following passage he summed up what had happened well: "When it comes down to crunch time, on the real important issues, we saw that we can put down our mantles. We can put down the Ds and Rs. We can put down the conservatives and the liberals. And we can be moms and dads and grandmas and granddads." It would seem that this alone is excellent reason for far more of the state's true moms and dads, grandmas and granddads to make a point of voting - or registering to vote. This is more than an embarrassment. It is a situation that, until more politicians come to their senses, will be adding to the suffering and even causing the preventable deaths of some children. Some issues are above and beyond politics. If there are this many politicians in Georgia not yet as fully mentally and compassionately developed as those in Alabama they have absolutely no business being in charge of the general public welfare. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom