Showing posts with label Medical Marijuana. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Medical Marijuana. Show all posts

Friday, June 12, 2009

Barney Frank introduced legislation yesterday aimed at making marijuana available through a doctor’s prescription nationwide

TO BE NOTED: From MPP:

"
Barney Frank introduces medical marijuana legislation

Congressman Barney Frank introduced legislation yesterday aimed at making marijuana available through a doctor’s prescription nationwide.

Please help MPP support H.R. 2835, by e-mailing and calling your U.S. Representative. MPP’s online resources at mpp.org/federal-action make it quick and easy to ask your legislator to cosponsor this important legislation.

Click here to take action.

H.R. 2835 makes two important changes to federal law. First, it eliminates federal authority to interfere with patients, caregivers, and collectives operating in accordance with state medical marijuana laws. Second, it moves marijuana from Schedule I under the Controlled Substances Act into Schedule II. Schedule II drugs have recognized medical benefits and can be prescribed by doctors to patients in need (for example, morphine is a Schedule II drug).

Congressman Frank’s legislation comes after months of growing debate over marijuana policy reform, but it will still face significant opposition in Congress — so please visit mpp.org/federal-action and do your part today!

Tagged with: and and by the author"

This is an injustice, and I think everyone has gotten the message

TO BE NOTED: From Reason:

"
New at Reason.tv: "This is an injustice and I think everyone has gotten the message"—Is Charlie Lynch's year-and-a-day sentence the end of medical marijuana prosecution?


Charlie Lynch is the medical marijuana dispensary owner whose business, fully legal under California state law, was raided by federal agents in 2007. Lynch was charged with five counts of violating federal drug laws. He faced as many as 100 years in prison, but on his June 11, 2009 sentencing date many expected the mandatory-minimum five-year sentence.

Although the fact that Lynch was prosecuted at all is an affront to anyone who believes in the 10th Amendment or the efficacy of medical marijuana, Lynch and his attorneys were relieved with the 366-day sentence delivered by U.S. District Court Judge George Wu. Lynch is free pending appeal, and his attorneys are hopeful he can avoid prison entirely. If he is imprisoned, the actual time he would spend behind bars would likely be about four months.

Defense attorney Reuven Cohen expects that his client will be among the last dispensary owners prosecuted in our nation's failed war on drugs. "I really think," says Cohen, "you're looking at, if not the last, then the penultimate or third to last medical marijuana dispensary prosecution in the United States....This is an injustice, and I think everyone has gotten the message."

This video update is approximately three minutes. Produced by Ted Balaker; shot by Alex Manning and Paul Detrick.

For audio podcast, iPod and HD versions, and related links, go here now.

The reason.tv documentary short, "Raiding California," which brought the Lynch case to a national audience, is here.

Reason's coverage of the Lynch saga is here."

Thursday, November 6, 2008

"two issues that I expect the new government to take care of in fairly short order:"

Adam Ricketson on Freedom Democrats with a couple basic requests for the Obama Administration:

  1. Medicalize marijuana: Marijuana should be recategorized from Schedule I to Schedule II, so that it is no more restricted in its use than Coca or Opium. This would not allow Americans to buy raw marijuana, but it would make it easier for drug companies to investigate and commercialize marijuana extracts and their derivatives. (I intend to write a full-length argument for rescheduling in the near future)

  2. Recognize civil unions at the Federal level: According to Glenn Greenwald, Section 3 of the so-called Defense of Marriage Act (1996) "prohibits the Federal Government and all federal agencies from extending any federal marriage-based benefits, privileges and rights to same-sex couples", causing great hardship on same-sex couples. This needs to end, and Greenwald makes a good case for this being a political no-brainer, let alone a moral no-brainer.

Here's my comment:

No-Brainers

#6896 On Thu, 2008 11 06 22:39 Don the liberta... said,

I agree.