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Written by Anthony Johnson
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Monday, April 21, 2008 |
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Senator Barack Obama
Senator Obama has publicly promised that he would not use federal resources to circumvent state medical marijuana laws. Sen. Obama also
voted against the Coburn Amendment, an amendment in the U.S. Senate that was intended to
undermine state medical marijuana laws and place medical cannabis patients at greater risk. Senator Obama recently reiterated his promise to not undermine states' medical marijuana laws in his recent campaign stop through Oregon.
In a recent interview with the Willamette Week , Obama boldly and unequivocally stated that he would halt the federal Drug Enforcement Agency raids on Oregon medical marijuana providers, stating, "I would because I think our federal agents have better things to do,
like catching criminals and preventing terrorism. The way I want to
approach the issue of medical marijuana is to base it on science, and
if there is sound science that supports the use of medical marijuana
and if it is controlled and prescribed in a way that other medicine is
prescribed, then it's something that I think we should consider."
Further, Sen. Obama has been one of the few major presidential campaigns to emphasize the injustice of our current criminal justice system. He has promised to create a prison-to-work incentive program and give first-time, non-violent offenders a chance to serve their
sentence in drug rehabilitation
programs that have proven to work better than severe prison terms.
Senator Obama was given an "A" rating by the Granite Staters for Medical Marijuana , a project of the Marijuana Policy Project (MPP) , that pushes the presidential candidates of both major parties to take strong,
public, positive positions on medical marijuana during the 2007-2008
primary campaign in New Hampshire.
Senator Hillary Clinton
Senator Hillary Clinton recently stated that raiding medical marijuana grows would not be a high priority of her Justice Department. telling the Willamette Week that she doesn't believe that it is "a good use of federal law-enforcement resources to be going after people who are supplying marijuana for medicinal purposes." Granite Staters for Medical Marijuana also gave Sen. Clinton an "A" rating.
Senator John McCain
Senator McCain has pledged to continue the failed and mean-spirited raids against medical marijuana patients that have plagued us through the Bush Administration. John W. McBush apparantly doesn't feel compassion for sick and disabled patients and is willing to waste limited federal law enforcement resourses to prevent patients from utilizing a beneficial medicine recommended by their doctor. Sen. McCain deservedly received an "F" grade from Granite Staters for Medical Marijuana.
Oregonians, remember to vote in the presidential primary by May 20th.
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Last Updated ( Thursday, May 15, 2008 )
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Written by Anthony Johnson
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Sunday, March 23, 2008 |
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Late Friday night, on the March 21st edition of the HBO show "Real Time," hosted by Bill Maher , Representative
Barney Frank (D--MA) announced his intention to file a bill that would
remove all federal penalties for small amounts of marijuana. This bill
would free up valuable federal resources, save taxpayers' billions of
dollars, and improve the lives of patients across the country. Frank
stated that he thinks "its time for the politicians in this one to
catch
up to the public. The notion that you lock people up for smoking
marijuana is pretty silly."
Representative Frank demonstrated that he is a man of his word by filing HR 5843 (Act to Remove Federal Penalties for Personal Use of Marijuana by
Responsible Adults). Rep. Frank's proposal would eliminate all penalties for possession of up
to 3½ ounces of cannabis and non-profit transfers of up to 1 ounce.
Also, Rep. Frank joined long-time Drug War critic, Representative Ron Paul (R-TX) , in filiing HR 5842, the Medical Marijuana Patient Protection Act, which would end the federal intervention in states that have passes laws allowing the medical use of cannabis.
Please contact your representatives
and urge them to support these bills. Representatives Frank and Paul have
shown great courage by standing up for such common-sense proposals,
but they need our help and the help of their collegues. While these
proposals likely won't be signed into law by George W. Bush, it is important to build our movement for the future. We will never change federal law without
starting somewhere and building upon that initial support.
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Last Updated ( Monday, April 21, 2008 )
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Written by John Sajo
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Friday, March 7, 2008 |
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The Oregonian
Sunday, February 10, 2008
Your editorial calling on legislators to reject a reasonable
compromise and pass a bill that would allow any employer to fire any medical
marijuana patient is misguided.
You cite the fact that 16,000 patients are registered in the medical
marijuana program as evidence of abuse. Anti-marijuana forces hoped there would
be few patients benefiting from medical marijuana because they don't want to
admit that marijuana has a positive side. The reality is that marijuana has
proved to be a safer, more effective medicine than many pharmaceutical
alternatives. That is why more than 2,600 Oregon doctors have recommended marijuana
for their patients.
Additionally, many carefully controlled scientific studies conducted since Oregon voters passed the
medical marijuana law have confirmed what the doctors and patients know from
experience. Marijuana is safe and effective for some patients when used
properly. Marijuana relieves suffering.
Your call to fire medical marijuana patients won't make our workplaces
safer. The business interests that want to fire patients have admitted that
they can't cite a single example of a workplace accident caused by a medical
marijuana patient. Focusing on marijuana and ignoring the risks from workers
who are impaired from alcohol, prescription drugs or just plain fatigue is
whitewashing the real problem.
What we really need in the workplace is impairment testing. This would help
employers identify workers who are dangerous to themselves or others regardless
of the reason.
JOHN SAJO
Director, Voter Power Southeast Portland
John
Sajo was named LTE Writer of the Week by the Media Awareness Project (MAP) for this
letter to the editor of The Oregonian. The Media Awareness Project is a worldwide network dedicated to drug policy reform, working to inform public opinion and promote balanced media coverage.
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Last Updated ( Wednesday, March 12, 2008 )
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Read more...
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Written by Administrator
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Thursday, February 28, 2008 |
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MEDICAL
MARIJUANA
NO
THREAT
TO
SAFETY
Source: Mail Tribune, The (Medford, OR)
Copyright: 2008 The Mail Tribune
Author: Laird Funk
Note: Laird Funk of Williams is one of the authors of the original Oregon
Medical Marijuana Act and vice chairman of the Advisory Committee on
Medical Marijuana, though he writes as a private citizen.
"The
sky
is
falling,
the
sky
is
falling!"
cried
Chicken
Little.
"Emergency!
Emergency!"
cries
Don
Harmon
(
guest
opinion,
Feb.
17
)
with
just
as
much
connection
with
reality.
For
over
three
legislative
sessions,
Harmon
has
proclaimed
an
emergency
in
the
workplace
because
some
workers
use
marijuana
therapeutically.
He
wants
to
fire
any
such
person,
no
matter
when
or
where
that
use
occurs.
It
is
a
safety
issue,
he
says.
Oregon
law
says,
"Patients
and
doctors
have
found
marijuana
to
be
an
effective
treatment"|
and
therefore,
marijuana
should
be
treated
like
other
medicines;"|".
In
most
workplaces
there
are
established
guidelines
for
other
medicines
and
therapeutic
marijuana
is
best
treated
like
them.
If
there
is
an
issue
of
impairment,
Oregon
law
already
allows
impaired
workers
to
be
removed,
no
matter
the
cause.
Still,
that
is
not
enough
for
Harmon.
I
have
watched
Harmon
testify
before
three
Legislatures
that
Oregon
needs
"Emergency"
legislation
so
employers
can
fire
therapeutic
marijuana
users
at
will.
He
and
a
small
crew
of
ditto-heads
speak
in
alarmed
tones
about
problems
caused
by
those
workers.
Yet
when
Rep.
Peter
Buckley
asked
directly
how
many
accidents
had
ever
been
caused
by
a
therapeutic
marijuana
using
workers,
the
answer
after
a
long
silence
was
"None."
So
much
for
the
"Emergency!"
Given
the
lack
of
accidents,
focusing
on
therapeutic
use
of
marijuana
as
a
cause
of
workplace
impairment
sees
misguided,
at
best.
Yet
Harmon
claims
that
one
of
the
biggest
dangers
to
the
workplace
is
the
"well
documented"
abuses
of
the
Oregon
Medical
Marijuana
Program ,
abuses
which
can
only
be
solved
by
essentially
demolishing
the
program.
He
cites
the
existence
of
almost
18,000
registrants
as
being
a
problem
for
employers
and
evidence
of
abuse.
But
is
it?
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Last Updated ( Wednesday, March 12, 2008 )
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Read more...
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Written by Anthony Johnson
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Friday, January 18, 2008 |
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Letters
Jan 18, 2008
Your article “Pot growers lure home
invaders” (Dec. 21) was yet another example of sloppy reporting
regarding the Oregon Medical Marijuana Program.
Unfortunately, patients and activists are used to
such careless reporting from virtually all of Oregon’s media, so the
Portland Tribune has plenty of company in this regard.
First, the headline is misleading and
inflammatory. Marijuana growers, medical or otherwise, do not “lure”
criminals into burglarizing their homes. To lure means to actively
attract, such as when a fisher lures a fish.
Thieves prey upon anyone who possesses valuable
items. However, I doubt your publication would ever print the headline
“Porsche owners lure car thieves.”
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Last Updated ( Friday, March 7, 2008 )
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Written by John Sajo
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Wednesday, November 21, 2007 |
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The Oregonian
What is he smoking?
Kevin Mannix has been smoking something strong if he thinks repealing the
Oregon Medical Marijuana Act is part of fighting crime (Letters, July 26).
There are 17,000 patients registered in this program by more than 2,500 Oregon physicians.
Participation in the program is growing because natural marijuana is superior
for some patients to the alternative prescription drug choices.
Mannix's Initiative 104 falsely claims to "replace" marijuana with
Marinol, a synthetic form of THC. But the 2,500 doctors who qualify patients
for the marijuana program already could prescribe Marinol. They don't, because
it doesn't work very well and is extremely expensive, sometimes more than
$1,000 a month.
Mannix would force 17,000 patients to take a medicine they
don't want and force taxpayers to pay for it. If there is any money left over
for law enforcement after this boondoggle, police will have to spend it
arresting and prosecuting the thousands of patients who won't quit taking a
medicine that works. Voters should reject this misguided initiative.
JOHN SAJO Director, Voter Power Southeast
Portland
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Last Updated ( Wednesday, March 12, 2008 )
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