Jim Finnel
Fallen Cannabis Warrior & Ex News Moderator
Hundreds of medical cannabis patients and supporters flocked to the Wisconsin State Capital for a Memorial for the late medical marijuana patient-activist Mary Powers, then visited their legislator’s offices to lobby for the Jacki Rickert Medical Marijuana Act. Hundreds more emailed or called from home.
The Memorial brought a diverse group of Wisconsinites to the Capitol, and included music from Native American traditional singer and drummer, Al Baker and singer songwriter Rick Harris. Harris played his song, “Legal Medicine Blues”, that Jacki Rickert’s quiet heroism inspired him to write 9 years ago.. Baker’s beautiful and haunting singing and drumming moved many as it echoed about the Capitol.
Mary's family was in attendance, Medical marijuana patients Jacki Rickert, Gary Storck and Teresa Shepherd spoke, as well as Wisconsin Veterans for Medical Marijuana’s Charles Wachtel and Mary Powers’ care provider Sherry, who cared for Mary in her last months and was present when she passed.
One notable absence was Wisconsin media. It appears not one television, print or radio reporter showed up to cover this event about something that 80% of state residents believe needs to be passed. No corporate media, not even a college paper reporter. Does this mean the media is now part of the disconnect? The media blackout does not matter. JRMMA supporters are becoming their own media. The event was streamed live over the internet. Videos are already online.
Ignoring the pleas of people in pain is something very un-Wisconsinlike. Is our state’s motto not “Forward”? Medical marijuana will be passed some day. Making patients wait means that in the end, more people will have suffered and died in pain unnecessarily because of the bigotry and cowardice of a small handful of Luddites. How many more Memorial Days will it take for state legislators to wake up and listen?
If the JRMMA fails to move this session, constituents will expect lawmakers to explain why it did not happen or why they refused to support it, when they contact voters to ask for their support this fall. There is a collision coming. Legislators will be expected to justify the delay. The best way to avoid this certain collision is to do the right thing and move the JRMMA to passage now. For that to happen, state lawmakers need to find the political courage to listen and do what their constituents are asking, not what the State Medical Society is asking, not what the pharmaceutical lobby is demanding, and not what the Attorney general is spinning.
Wednesday’s historic gathering, the largest indoor medical cannabis event inside the Capitol ever, proved that advocates are not giving up. If anything, they are learning what it takes to finish a battle that has now been going on since the 1970’s in our state, and they are well aware of those who are the impediments to patients having legal access to their medicine.
YouTube - Al Baker sings Native American hymn at WI MMJ Lobby Day and Mary Powers Memorial: Number 2
YouTube - Jacki Rickert speaks at the January 20, 2010 Mary Powers Medical Marijuana Memorial and Lobby Day
YouTube - Gary Storck speaks at the January 20, 2010 Mary Powers Medical Marijuana Memorial and Lobby Day
NewsHawk: User: 420 Magazine - Cannabis Culture News & Reviews
Source: examiner.com
Author: Gary Storck
Copyright: 2010 Clarity Digital Group LLC d/b/a Examiner.com
Contact: Contact Us
Website: Wisconsin medical cannabis supporters go on the offensive
The Memorial brought a diverse group of Wisconsinites to the Capitol, and included music from Native American traditional singer and drummer, Al Baker and singer songwriter Rick Harris. Harris played his song, “Legal Medicine Blues”, that Jacki Rickert’s quiet heroism inspired him to write 9 years ago.. Baker’s beautiful and haunting singing and drumming moved many as it echoed about the Capitol.
Mary's family was in attendance, Medical marijuana patients Jacki Rickert, Gary Storck and Teresa Shepherd spoke, as well as Wisconsin Veterans for Medical Marijuana’s Charles Wachtel and Mary Powers’ care provider Sherry, who cared for Mary in her last months and was present when she passed.
One notable absence was Wisconsin media. It appears not one television, print or radio reporter showed up to cover this event about something that 80% of state residents believe needs to be passed. No corporate media, not even a college paper reporter. Does this mean the media is now part of the disconnect? The media blackout does not matter. JRMMA supporters are becoming their own media. The event was streamed live over the internet. Videos are already online.
Ignoring the pleas of people in pain is something very un-Wisconsinlike. Is our state’s motto not “Forward”? Medical marijuana will be passed some day. Making patients wait means that in the end, more people will have suffered and died in pain unnecessarily because of the bigotry and cowardice of a small handful of Luddites. How many more Memorial Days will it take for state legislators to wake up and listen?
If the JRMMA fails to move this session, constituents will expect lawmakers to explain why it did not happen or why they refused to support it, when they contact voters to ask for their support this fall. There is a collision coming. Legislators will be expected to justify the delay. The best way to avoid this certain collision is to do the right thing and move the JRMMA to passage now. For that to happen, state lawmakers need to find the political courage to listen and do what their constituents are asking, not what the State Medical Society is asking, not what the pharmaceutical lobby is demanding, and not what the Attorney general is spinning.
Wednesday’s historic gathering, the largest indoor medical cannabis event inside the Capitol ever, proved that advocates are not giving up. If anything, they are learning what it takes to finish a battle that has now been going on since the 1970’s in our state, and they are well aware of those who are the impediments to patients having legal access to their medicine.
YouTube - Al Baker sings Native American hymn at WI MMJ Lobby Day and Mary Powers Memorial: Number 2
YouTube - Jacki Rickert speaks at the January 20, 2010 Mary Powers Medical Marijuana Memorial and Lobby Day
YouTube - Gary Storck speaks at the January 20, 2010 Mary Powers Medical Marijuana Memorial and Lobby Day
NewsHawk: User: 420 Magazine - Cannabis Culture News & Reviews
Source: examiner.com
Author: Gary Storck
Copyright: 2010 Clarity Digital Group LLC d/b/a Examiner.com
Contact: Contact Us
Website: Wisconsin medical cannabis supporters go on the offensive