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US: The Cannabis Crusades: Medical Marijuana and the Recall Election

Ed Rosenthal

The Independent Institute, http://independent.org/

Monday 29 Sep 2003

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The San Francisco Chronicle recently published an article in which I
expressed regret at not being allowed to vote in the upcoming California
gubernatorial recall -- the first election in which I would not be voting
since I turned 18, 40 years ago. I had been told by my probation officer
that my three felony convictions related to cultivating medicinal marijuana
had also resulted in the loss of my right to vote.

Although I was spared prison time, the loss of my voting rights was cruel
punishment for me, because I have always been politically and civically active.

It is remarkable that I ended up with the felonies, since I had been
deputized by the city of Oakland and promised immunity from prosecution for
providing medicine to qualified patients.

Still, I feel a certain satisfaction about the recall campaign. I watched
one of my daydreams come true in the first debate. Medical marijuana was
the only issue that all the candidates agreed upon: all pledged to uphold
Californias marijuana laws. State Sen. Tom McClintock, R-Northridge, the
most conservative, was the most ardent -- stating that the federal
government should stay out of the state's business.

When Dennis Peron opened San Franciscos first medical marijuana dispensary
nearly 10 years ago, there was virtually unanimous agreement among
politicians and the criminal justice community that marijuana wasn't a
medicine. Furthermore, the risk was too great for the medicine to be
permitted. What a difference a decade makes. In 1994, no reporter would
have asked the question, but if they had, every candidate would have
pledged to redouble efforts to eliminate the assassin of youth.

All the candidates agreed that medical marijuana should be legal,but
there are definite differences in their attitudes toward what legal means
and who should decide. This is significant, because some California state
agencies are still at war against this popular medicine. The California
attorney general's Medical Board is prosecuting doctors based on
complaints. Neither patients, their caregivers, nor their loved ones are
complaining. No, all the complaints are being filed by officers or
prosecutors thwarted when they attempt to arrest or prosecute a patient.
Police and prosecutors in some counties have declared war on medical
patients, spending an inordinate amount of time and taxpayers' money to
harass people whose only crime is that they are ill.

State probation and parole orders sometimes limit use of medical marijuana,
even in life-threatening cases. Could you imagine the uproar if a judge
denied a diabetic the use of insulin?

These actions are being fueled by the inflammatory rhetoric of the
California Narcotic OfficersAssociation. The organization denies that
marijuana has any medical use and encourages police and prosecutors to view
all medical cases as bogus. Its lobbyists use obstructionist tactics and
threaten legislators inclined to vote to implement provisions of
Proposition 215, California's medical marijuana law. CNOA functions as a
clique of verbal terrorists fighting against patient's rights.

The problem with the implementation of Proposition 215 is that it is based
on the stakeholders theory,where all the interested parties reach a
compromise. This policy may work for water rights, but it is insane when
patients' health is compromised.

The idea that the criminal justice system is a stakeholder in a health and
medical issue is ridiculous on its face. The police have training only in
identifying marijuana and arresting its owners. They have no cultivation
expertise, know next to nothing about the herbs medical use and have no
sociological knowledge to lend to the discussion. The police's only vested
interest in marijuana is using tax dollars to arrest and incarcerate users
of any type, recreational or medical. The police industry's influence in
this medical and sociological debate is inappropriate, since their
representatives mostly deny marijuana's medical benefits and view arrests
as an employment issue.

That's why this recall campaign is such a watershed. All the candidates
accept marijuana as medicine. How each one would implement the law is of
prime importance to the 70,000 Californians holding medical marijuana
recommendations. Will patients using this exceedingly safe herbal medicine
continue to be held hostage to stakeholderswhose interest is a high
arrest count?

Meanwhile, readers of my article in the Chronicle contacted the newspaper
to correct the disinformation my probation officer had given me -- as a
convicted felon not currently in prison or on parole, I in fact retain my
right to vote. Ironically, just as the jury in my trial only learned the
truth of my case outside of the courtroom, I only learned the truth about
my voting rights outside of the criminal justice system. While I was
certainly pleased to learn that my right to vote remains unbreached, I
wonder more than ever how long we will allow our criminal justice system to
misrepresent the facts to achieve its own ends.

*Ed Rosenthal, co-author of Why Marijuana Should Be Legal, is a medical
marijuana pioneer. He was convicted in a landmark federal case in Spring
2003, following which the jury rebelled against the judges refusal to
allow the presentation of the relevant facts of the case. He is a featured
speaker at the Independent Institute Policy Forum, The Truth About Medical
Marijuana,October 2nd, at the Hotel Nikko, in San Francisco.



 

 

 

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