Obama Medical Marijuana Policy Moves From Benign Tolerance to Vague Menace

Jacob Bell

New Member
Would you like some irony with that baggie of medical marijuana? Well, like it or not, you're getting some. Medical marijuana has been legal for a decade or so in various U.S. states but it wasn't until the Ogden memo of 2009 that it really took off.

That was the memo from the Department of Justice that states and medical marijuana providers took to mean the feds would stand down and look the other way as long as medical marijuana patients and providers were in clear compliance with state laws.

Then somebody at the Department of Justice apparently decided that maybe it wasn't cool for the feds to look the other way as states began flaunting their defiance of the Controlled Substances Act, and medical marijuana states got a raft of new letters from new DOJ attorneys, culminating in the Cole memo which said that state laws are not a defense when it comes to breaking federal laws.

So, on the one hand you have the Department of Justice essentially launching the medical marijuana boom with a memo that seemed to spell out the fact that the nation's top law enforcement agency would respect state law and pretty much stay out of medical marijuana. Then, on the other hand you have that same agency saying "Now, wait a minute, that's not what we meant at all."

"It is very disappointing that the Obama Administration has backed off significantly from what they promised. (Attorney General Eric) Holder was very clear earlier that the Ogden memo applied to entities such as dispensaries and not just to patients," said Karen O'Keefe, director of state policy for the Marijuana Policy Project, in Washington, D.C.

As people in the medical marijuana field look from the Ogden memo to the Cole memo, their moods darken.

From The Miami Herald:

In October 2009, medical marijuana advocates celebrated a U.S. Department of Justice memo declaring that federal authorities wouldn't target the legal use of medicinal pot in states where it is permitted.

The memo from Deputy U.S. Attorney General David Ogden was credited with accelerating a California medical marijuana boom, including a proliferation of dispensaries that now handle more than $1 billion in pot transactions.

But last month brought a new memo from another deputy attorney general, James Cole. And this time, it is stirring industry fears of federal raids on pot dispensaries and sweeping crackdowns on large-scale medical pot cultivation.

Cole asserted in the June 29 memo that state laws "are not a defense" from federal prosecution, saying, "Congress has determined that marijuana is a dangerous drug" — and that distributing it "is a serious crime."

It isn't just the vague threat to crack down on medical marijuana providers that concerns people, as it is the overall disconnect.

When the Drug Enforcement Administration ruled earlier this summer that marijuana has no medical use, that ruling flew in the face of the federal government's own research.

From Alternet:

Most recently, the Drug Enforcement Administration rejected a formal citizen petition filed nine years ago to reschedule marijuana to make it available for medical use. When the DEA considered a similar petition during the Reagan administration, the agency's administrative law judge concluded, "Marijuana has been accepted as capable of relieving the distress of great numbers of very ill people." The Obama administration's rejection of the petition claims marijuana "has no currently accepted medical use in treatment in the United States ... lacks accepted safety for use under medical supervision... [and] has a high potential for abuse." Lest one think the DEA's ruling is just law enforcement run amok, the White House released its 2011 National Drug Control Strategy earlier this week, calling marijuana "addictive and unsafe." That document devotes five pages attacking marijuana legalization and medical marijuana.

The administration's disconnect from science is shocking. A federally commissioned study by the Institute of Medicine more than a decade ago determined that nausea, appetite loss, pain and anxiety "all can be mitigated by marijuana." The esteemed medical journal the Lancet Neurology reports that marijuana's active components "inhibit pain in virtually every experimental pain paradigm." The National Cancer Institute, part of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, notes that marijuana may help with nausea, loss of appetite, pain and insomnia. Sixteen states and the District of Columbia, home to 90 million Americans, have adopted laws allowing the medical use of marijuana to treat AIDS, cancer, glaucoma, multiple sclerosis and other ailments. The federal government itself cultivates and supplies marijuana to a handful of patients through its "compassionate-use investigative new drug program," which was established in 1978 but closed to new patients in 1992.

"It's an outrageous betrayal. It's anti-scientific to claim marijuana has no medical value," O'Keefe told the Colorado Independent. "Half a million Americans use medical marijuana, recommended by their physicians to alleviate pain. There's never been a known overdose. It's less addictive than alcohol."

She said Obama has turned his back on his campaign promises and left medical marijuana states looking at a federal law enforcement situation that is "clear as mud."

Brian Vicente, executive director of Sensible Colorado, agreed.

"With each new memo President Obama seems to be getting further away from his campaign promise to allow states to take the lead on medical marijuana policy. Paradoxically, his views reaffirm protections for medical marijuana patients, while threatening larger producers who provide medicine to those very patients. It seems Obama would prefer patients to get medicine from the black market as opposed to obtaining it from strictly regulated and taxed providers who are licensed under state law."

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News Hawk- Jacob Ebel 420 MAGAZINE
Source: coloradoindependent.com
Author: Scot Kersgaard
Contact: Contact Us
Copyright: The American Independent News Network
Website: Obama medical marijuana policy moves from benign tolerance to vague menace
 
Our government should reflect the attitude and convictions of the people. But it seems like when it comes to cannabis, what the people want just isn't important.
 
Scary stuff. Thanks for the update.
 
When we give government power, the only way they give it up is by force not votes. Just look At Michigan for example 62 or 63% of votes cast were for mmj. Now these same voters will is being disregarded as ill informed. Voters had their say(democracy in action ) now the government doesn't like what we had to say.So they pass ordinances and laws against the will of the governed(tyranny? ).
When has any government official ever received 62% of the vote?
Wouldn't they call it a landslide? Wouldn't they claim a mandatefor change?
Just plain sick of it and in pain, gonna go med now. Peace
 
WE. THE PEOPLE.

remember us?

We may only show up to vote once every four years.

We may occasionally rally and show up in an off year for something like a Patients Right to make their own adult decisions on a course of treatment for a medical condition that is very personal to us.

I know it seems corny and all. How some thing you didn't make a dime off of may actually take up some time in your day. This stupid voter initiated and approved Medical Marijuana thing is going to mean you have to take a break from your normal routine of lobbyists and special interests and conflicts of interest and uninteresting mumbo jumbo that does not interest us enough to vote all the other times. It sucks, we all agree that having to do actual work sucks, (it is why they pay people). But in the spirit of good sportsmanship, since it was a vote that got you hired, maintain the integrity of the game and honor our vote just this once.

What is the BEST that could happen? I assume a good leader of the people today would want to use this additional voting block in some of those off year elections.you pick up a few supporters that if you are really cool to, may vote for you when you want something... Like a new job :)


Cordially,
Les
 
O'Zombie and his justice dept. have taken away most of our constitutional rights anyway, so be realistic and see that they will never give up their persecution of personal freedoms as long as they are pandering to the "center" and Wall Street for money and votes. Just make up your mind to be outlaws outside the law as adverse to outlaws on Wall Street.
They will drain you dry with court cases and appeals as they tried to do with censorship in the 40's,50's and 60's in the Barny Rossett/Evergreen Review/Grove Press cases that were necessary before you could legally read the likes of A.Ginsburg,J.Keroac, William S. Burroughs, The Tropic of Cancer, and see a woman without clothes on in a magazine. It does little if any good to "speak truth to power" as those in power know what the score is anyway. Where are the Bobby Seales, the Eldrige Cleavers and Malcom X's now that we need them again?
Loyalty to the Nation, always. Loyalty to the leaders only when they dererve it. Mark Twain
 
Again here is your government covering all its bases:

"On October 7, 2003 The United States Government as represente-d by the Department of Health and Human Services was granted a U.S. Patent (#6630507) on any and all uses and applicatio-ns of: Cannabinoi-ds as antioxidan-ts and neuroprote-ctants.

In other words, THE GOVERNMENT ALREADY OWNS THE ORGANIC THC OIL BY FORCE... and now THEY OWN THE SYNTHETIC THC OIL BY PATENT."

(Think about that the next time someone says that pot does not have any medical value.)

Here's a link to the US Patent

Chronology of Cannabis : 420 MAGAZINE
 
its like everything,some people abusing the system to get weed,hopefully i never have a terminal illness but uf i do the last thing i want is to be stoned.the yanks will never back down on this if obama wants to get the eye off himself for the multi trillion dollar debt then he is gonna come down on all them pot heads
 
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