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Tag: medical cannabis

Veteran’s Right to Bear Arms Will Be Denied If He Acquires Medical Marijuana Prescription

America’s servicemen are being denied their right to self-defense simply if they use medical marijuana. The Dallas Morning News recounted the disturbing case of Joshua Raines, a veteran and Purple Heart recipient who has been battling epilepsy and PTSD during the last few years. After serving in the military for five years, Raines started to develop debilitating conditions. In order to treat them, Raines used marijuana. However, he did so illegally. Veterans Technically, under the Compassionate Use Program, Raines would have been eligible for a legal prescription of medical marijuana starting in 2015. That year, Texas lawmakers enacted the program to allow patients with uncontrolled epilepsy to use medical marijuana. Interestingly enough, the veteran has not sought a prescription due to the fact that doing so would have him stripped of his right to bear arms. Raines commented, “Why am I going to give up one of my rights because I found an organic plant that some are uncomfortable with?” “I’m not going to do that. I’m not going to trade my rights like baseball cards.” During the last 15 years, states across the nation have either legalized or decriminalized marijuana. Most have actually legalized medical marijuana in some shape or form despite its classification under federal law as a controlled substance “with no currently accepted medical use and a high potential for abuse.” For the most part, the feds have maintained a hands-off approach to enforcement in light of states defying the law. On the other hand, guns come with stricter regulations. In accordance with federal law, it is illegal for a marijuana user to purchase a firearm. For many gun owners in Texas, acquiring medical marijuana is not an option due to the threat of them losing their gun rights. The Texas director of Gun Owners of America, Rachel Malone commented on this situation. “To tell Texans you can’t purchase a firearm if you have a compassionate use card is unconscionable. We should not force people to choose between gun ownership and taking care of themselves.” Firearms application forms have explicit questions about the use of “marijuana or any depressant, stimulant, narcotic drug, or any other controlled substance.” They also highlight how marijuana remains illegal under federal law. The warning section, states the following: “Warning: The use or possession of marijuana remains unlawful under Federal law regardless of whether it has been legalized or decriminalized for medicinal or recreational purposes in the state where you reside.” In the Dallas Morning News article, Raines admitted that he would use marijuana, regardless of the legal consequences, because of how effective it has been in treating his seizure bouts. He resoundingly concluded, “I fought for the right to bear arms. It’s literally in our Constitution for me to be able to own a gun. For the state of Texas that is the most pro-gun, I think it’s ridiculous I would have to trade one of my rights.” A state like Texas, which supposedly has some of the best gun laws in the nation, should not be allowing such an injustice to occur. This shows the strong linkage between the issue of gun rights and drug freedom. Liberty is tied to every human activity and should not be treated as mutually exclusive concepts when dealing with activities that some of us don’t partake in. The connection of these two issues also gives a pragmatic case study of the necessity to build coalitions with separate interest groups—gun rights and drug reform. Although Raines’ case is sad, it does present a golden opportunity for liberty activists to position themselves accordingly and build trans partisan coalitions.  

They Said It… With The Economist, David Letterman, and More

(From the Intellectual Ammunition section in Volume 19, No. 6 of the Liberator Online. Subscribe here!) FACES TO VOICES: “President Obama now is meeting with the G-7 leaders… it must be fun for him to put faces to the voices he hears on the wiretaps.” — David Letterman, March 24, 2014. PERVERSE INCENTIVES: “The War on Drugs creates perverse incentives. When the police find The Economistassets that they suspect are the proceeds of crime, they can seize them. Under civil asset-forfeiture rules, they do not have to prove that a crime was committed — they can grab first and let the owners sue to get their stuff back. The police can meanwhile use the money to beef up their own budgets, buying faster patrol cars or computers. All this gives them a powerful incentive to focus on drug crimes, which generate lots of cash, rather than, say, rape, which does not. This is outrageous. Citizens should not forfeit their property unless convicted of a crime; and the proceeds should fund the state as a whole, not the arm that does the grabbing.” — editorial, The Economist magazine, “Armed and dangerous,” March 22, 2014. WHY DOES THE GOV’T HURT SICK PEOPLE: “It states in the Bible not to abuse a drug, it doesn’t say you can’t use it. If you ask me, cannabis is a gift from God.” — preacher’s daughter Aimee Curry, who found marijuana was the only medicine that relieved agonizing muscle spasms from a near-fatal car accident. She told her story on CNN’s “Weed 2: Cannabis Madness: Dr. Sanjay Gupta Reports,” Tuesday, March 11, 2014. LEGAL POT GETTING PEOPLE OFF DANGEROUS PRESCRIPTION DRUGS:  Dr. Mark Rabe “Patients often come into my office and drop down a brown bag full of pill bottles on my desk and say,’I’m off Oxycodone; I’m off muscle relaxants. I’m off Ambien; I’m off Trazodone,’ because medical cannabis does the job better. Time after time these patients tell me that medical cannabis works better than the pills, and with fewer side effects. Cannabis has such a good safety profile and is much less addictive than opiates. In my mind, cannabis is a good potential replacement for opiates.” — Dr. Mark Rabe, a Northwestern University School of Medicine-trained physician who treats Aimee Curry, quoted above. Rabe noted that deaths from prescription drugs are on the rise, while death from marijuana overdose is virtually impossible. NEW JERSEY GUN-GRABBER WANTS TO CLASSIFY ORDINARY GUN OWNERS AS “TERRORISTS OR GANGSTERS”: “Our top priority is a 10-round limit on magazine size. NobodyNew Jersey gun control activist Brian Miller needs a 15-round ammunition magazine unless they are a domestic terrorist or a gangster.” — New Jersey gun control activist Bryan Miller on proposed state legislation to outlaw possession of such guns in the state, including 43 commonly-owned rifles. The Post says the bill “has no grandfather clause and no amnesty period. So as soon as this legislation becomes law, everyone in possession of these rifles is automatically a felon and the guns are subject to seizure by the government. …The penalty is up to 10 years in jail and a mandatory minimum sentence of three to five years, with no chance of parole.” The legislation is expected to pass the state House and Senate and land on Gov. Chris Christie’s desk. LIBERTARIAN PARTY’S NO-TAX CONVENTION: Libertarian Party Executive Director Wes Benedict“Democrats and Republicans each got about $18 million of government money for their national conventions in 2012. We Libertarians pay for our own conventions.”— Wes Benedict, executive director of the Libertarian National Committee, quoted in the Washington Times, “Libertarians Strut Their Stuff,” March 19, 2014. Learn more about the upcoming LP convention — to be held in Columbus, Ohio, June 28-29 — here. David Letterman LETTERMAN ON TAX SLAVES: “The average American citizen — you hear the statistic all the time — works six months out of the year for the government. That’s how difficult the taxes are in this country. We work six months out of the year. Government employees don’t even do that.” — David Letterman, March 14, 2014. NOT RIGHT AWAY: Jimmy FallonYesterday Edward Snowden urged technology companies to improve their encryption techniques in order to prevent hacking. Then he said, ‘But not right away. I’m still using Obama’s Netflix password to watch ‘House of Cards.'”— Jimmy Fallon, March 11, 2014.