2008
Sub-archives
Dec 30, 2008
A Submission to the FDA on Marinol vs. Cannabis
I found this searching around for nomenclature for cannabis on the FDA site. I think this woman does a great job of explaining the silliness of allowing Marinol but not cannabis in its natural form. Too bad the FDA is in the pockets of big pharm and refuses to see the light, eh?
International Drug Scheduling; Convention on Psychotropic Substances; Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs; Butorphanol; Delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol (Dronabinol); Gamma-Hydroxybutyric Acid; Ketamine;
FDA Comment Number :
EC3
Submitter :
Ms. Melissa Osterhoudt
Date & Time:
12/19/2005 01:12:00
Organization :
Ms. Melissa Osterhoudt
Category :
International Public Citizen
Issue Areas/Comments
GENERAL
GENERAL
Thank you for taking public ommentary on this topic.
Regarding delta-9-tetrahycrocannabinal or dronabinol otherwise known as marinol: this substance has been shown to be less effective than naturally occuring cannabis for the treatment of currently approved health disorders. In addition, cannabis is making headlines internationally in its effectiveness with RA, Parkinson's, Alzheimers and other diseases. It is time to delete this from schedule III. Marinol has it's own problems: it causes drowsiness and mental fog, whereas naturally occuring cannabis can be administered in more minute doses to allow the effective dose for treattment while preventing too large of a dose which causes the above mentioned symptoms. This allows for greater integration into activities of daily living, which is of utmost importance to those who are currently prescribed Marinol.
Lastly, all prescription drugs are abused, including aspirin. There is no way to prevent, fully, the abuse and misuse of drugs of any kind (even non-psychotropic). Abuse is known to stem from greater societal problems which need to be addressed in order to really get tot he root of the problem. In addition, cannabis in general has been proven to be non-habit forming, it is not physically addictive (unlike non- schedule 3 drugs such as prednisone and others and freely used/abused non-theraputic mind altering substances such as nicotine and alcohol). People abuse food and sex as well. It is really time to get real about this substance for its theraputic effects and non-addictive nature far outweigh the long standing stigma that has shrouded it for so many decades. If we look at Europe's stance of decriminalization we will find far less instances of abuse/addiction and criminal activity around this substance (either as natural cannabis or Marinol). Much of our problems lie in prohibition of this substance in general. People are drawn to that which is denied, like moths to the flame. When this substance (in every form) is no longer demonized and people are no longer presented with 1) factual scientific studies that clearly refute the propaganda 2) factual circumstansial evidence from other countries' successful decriminalization efforts 3) overt PR efforts to continue the ridiculous "war on drugs" which substantially focuses on cannabis despite the above facts; then the glamor of this supposed demon will be reduced and abuse will decrease (as it has in Europe).
Marinol is a step in the right direction, but it is a small and insufficient step. It has side effects that consumers find unpleasant while they are already dealing with horribly unpleasant symptoms. Only those folks who are suffering pretty horribly are prescribed this medication, which is like pulling teeth to get, and then they have to deal with the side effects while the naturally occuring substance is better controlled for administration of the drug and has little to no side effects. This is just plain silly to continue this substance as a Schedule III, it is contributing to untold human suffering and is a huge waste of taxpayer's money.
Dec 23, 2008
Article On Obama and Cannabis Reform
Found this article on the lists and thought it was worthy of a read for everyone. At some point reason has to begin to outweigh irrationality. The War on Drugs is a complete failure and we must begin to rethink our policies. I am interested to see what progress is made on this front.
A tree grows in Washington? Writer-at-large John H. Richardson's column, "The Richardson Report," runsright here each Tuesday. Famously, Franklin Delano Roosevelt saved the United States banking system during the first seven days of his first term. And what did he do on the eighth day? "I think this would be a good time for beer," he said. Congress had already repealed Prohibition, pending ratification from the states. But the people needed a lift, and legalizing beer would create a million jobs. And lo, booze was back. Two days after the bill passed, Milwaukee brewers hired six hundred people and paid their first $10 million in taxes. Soon the auto industry was tooling up the first $12 million worth of delivery trucks, and brewers were pouring tens of millions into new plants. "Roosevelt's move to legalize beer had the effect he intended," says Adam Cohen, author of Nothing To Fear, a thrilling new history of FDR's first hundred days. "It was, one journalist observed, 'like a stick of dynamite into a log jam.'" Many in the marijuana world are now hoping for something similar from Barack Obama. After all, the president-elect said in 2004 that the war on drugs had been "an utter failure" and that America should decriminalize pot: In July, Obama told Rolling Stone that he believed in "shifting the paradigm" to a public-health approach: "I would start with nonviolent, first-time drug offenders. The notion that we are imposing felonies on them or sending them to prison, where they are getting advanced degrees in criminality, instead of thinking about ways like drug courts that can get them back on track in their lives -- it's expensive, it's counterproductive, and it doesn't make sense." Meanwhile, economists have been making the beer argument. In a papertitled "Budgetary Implications of Marijuana Prohibition," Dr. Jeffrey Miron of Harvard argues that legalized marijuana would generate between $10 and $14 billion in savings and taxes every year -- conclusions endorsed by 300 top economists, including Milton "Free Market" Friedman himself. And two weeks ago, when the Obama team asked the public to vote on the top problems facing America, this was the public's No. 1 question: "Will you consider legalizing marijuana so that the government can regulate it, tax it, put age limits on it, and create millions of new jobs and a billion dollar industry right here in the U.S.?" But alas, the answer from Camp Obama was -- as it has been for years -- a flat one-liner: "President-elect Obama is not in favor of the legalization of marijuana." And at least two of Obama's top people are drug-war supporters: Rahm Emanuel has been a long-time enemy of reform, and Joe Biden is a drug-war mainstay who helped create the position of "drug czar." Meanwhile, in 2007, the last year for which statistics are available, 782,000 Americans were arrested for marijuana-related crimes (90 percent of them for possession), with approximately 60,000 to 85,000 of them serving sentences in jail or prison. It's the continuation of an unnecessary stream of suffering that now has taught generations of Americans just how capricious their government can be. The irony is that the preference for "decriminalization" over legalization actually supports the continued existence of criminal drug mafias. Nevertheless, the marijuana community is guardedly optimistic. "Reformers will probably be disappointed that Obama is not going to go as far as they want, but we're probably not going to continue this mindless path of prohibition," NORML executive director Allen St. Pierre tells me. Some of Obama's biggest financial donors are friends of the legalization movement, St. Pierre notes. "Frankly, George Soros, Peter Lewis, and John Sperling -- this triumvirate of billionaires -- if those three men, who put up $50 to $60 million to get Democrats and Obama elected, can't pick up the phone and actually get a one-to-one meeting on where this drug policy is going, then maybe it's true that when you give money, you don't expect favors." Another member of that moneyed group: Marsha Rosenbaum, the former head of the San Francisco office of the Drug Policy Alliance, who quit last year to become a fundraiser for Obama and "bundled" an impressive $204,000 for his campaign. She said that based on what she hears from inside the transition team, she expects Obama to play it very safe. "He said at one point that he's not going to use any political capital with this -- that's a concern," Rosenbaum tells me. And the Path to Change will probably have to pass through the Valley of Studies and Reports. "I'm hoping that what the administration will do," she says, "is something this country hasn't done since 1971, which is to undertake a presidential commission to look at drug policy, convene a group of blue-ribbon experts to look at the issue, and make recommendations." But ultimately, Rosenbaum remains confident that those recommendations would call for an end to the drug war. "Once everything settles down in the second term, we have a shot at seeing some real reform." Still, a certain paranoia prevails. Rumors about Obama's choice for drug czar have lingered on Republican Congressman Jim Ramstad. "He's been a standard anti-drug warrior for the whole time he's been in Congress," says St. Pierre. Another possibility is Atlanta police chief Richard Pennington, who raises fears in the legalization community of more of the same law-enforcement model. Another prospect stirring the pothead waters is Dr. Don Vereen, the chief drug policy thinker on the transition team. "He's really a believer in prohibition and he can excite an audience," says Rosenbaum, who says a friend on the transition team refused to hint at final contenders for the drug czar pick. "I'm joking with him, 'I'm going to have to open up the New York Times for this, aren't I?'" His answer: "We're going to send out smoke signals."
Dec 22, 2008
NADELMANN FOR DRUG CZAR PETITION
Please sign the petition at http://drugczarofmydreams.com/node/2 to show our support for sensible policy makers at the Nation's highest level. the War on Drugs is a failure and there should be a person who knows this leading the charge onnew policy and different directions in our nation's drug policy.
To: President-elect Barack Obama We the undersigned request the appointment of Ethan Nadelmann to direct the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy (“Drug Czar”) of the United States of America. For more than 20 years, Dr. Nadelmann has advocated in The United States and abroad for an open discussion of national drug control policy. His grasp of international law, the history of prohibition and current global drug control regimes is unparalleled. Through his books, dozens of published articles, academic lectures and papers, Dr. Nadelmann has demonstrated a detailed grasp of the evolving network of global prohibitions and international enforcement treaties. His exemplary research skills and resulting accomplishments have provided him a unique understanding of the history, development and contemporary practices of U.S. drug control policy and its relationship to the health of the citizens of The United States. Dr. Nadelmann’s command of the best available peer-reviewed scientific research would best serve The United States at the Drug Czar position, responsible for setting national goals on education, drug abuse prevention and law enforcement. He is eminently qualified to conceive of a national drug control policy that vastly improves on the current model, which has changed little over the last 35 years, in order to better safeguard the health of our children and the general U.S. population, reduce crime rates and recidivism, abate drug-related violence, conspiratorial activity and address head on a vast source of clandestine financial support for international terrorism. Dr. Nadelmann has directed the non-partisan, nonprofit advocacy group the Drug Policy Alliance for more than 15 years, which boasts the support of Nobel laureates, prominent U.S. government representatives from both political parties, economists, scientists, and members of law enforcement. It is our belief that his rigorous approach to identifying common-sense solutions, combined with his unique ability to inspire diverse audiences from both sides of the aisle, makes Dr. Nadelmann uniquely qualified for the position of Drug Czar in an administration whose stated goals are to repeal the harshest drug sentences, remove federal bans on funding syringe-exchange programs to reduce AIDS, give medical marijuana a fair chance to prove itself, and support treatment alternatives for low-level drug offenders. Sign Petition @ http://drugczarofmydreams.com/node/2Nadelmann for Drug Czar Petition
Dec 20, 2008
Bristol Palin's Mother-In-Law Dealing Oxycontin?
Where is the outrage? Why are there not armed gunmen storming the offices of the maker of oxycontin? With this type of blatant abuses in the "closed" drug system, when does the harm outweigh the benefit? The dangers of oxycontin far outweigh the dangers of cannabis, yet there are growing abuses in the system and doctors continue to half-hazzardly prescribe these drugs at alarming rates. Why the hypocrisy?
Posted on Fri, Dec. 19, 2008 last updated: December 19, 2008 11:34:30 PM WASILLA, Alaska — Wasilla resident Sherry L. Johnston, mother of Bristol Palin's boyfriend, faces a Jan. 6 court date for an oxycontin-related arrest at her home by Alaska State Troopers. Little additional information was available Friday on the case as authorities remained unusually tight-lipped about details. But Palmer court records listed Johnston's scheduled court date and a troopers spokeswoman said in a release late Friday afternoon that the charges "are in relation to the drug oxycontin." Johnston is the mother of Levi Johnston, who Gov. Sarah Palin said was the father of Bristol Palin's unborn child. Levi Johnston joined the Palins at the Republican National Convention when Palin was running for vice president. It was during the convention that the governor and her husband, Todd, announced Bristol's pregnancy. She was arrested around noon Thursday by troopers serving a search warrant in an undercover drug investigation. A standard press release issued by troopers said Johnston was arrested on six felony counts: second-degree misconduct involving a controlled substance - generally manufacturing or delivering drugs - as well as fourth-degree misconduct involving controlled substances, or possession. She was released on bail Thursday afternoon, just a few hours later. Johnston has not responded to phone messages or requests for comment left at the family home. Nobody answered the door there Friday. Troopers spokeswoman Megan Peters wouldn't say Friday if there were other potential defendants. Normally, troopers file charging documents in court to back up arrests. Clerks at the Palmer courthouse said they hadn't seen any filings, and none has to be filed until the hearing. The Palmer District Attorney's office prosecutes drug cases. Palmer District Attorney Roman Kalytiak said he was aware of the arrest, but also had not seen any reports or charging documents. Kalytiak said the standard protocol for drug arrests is that law enforcement officials observe one drug buy, then get a warrant that permits them to record conversations and document more buys. "I'd imagine standard protocol was followed," the district attorney said. A spokesman for Gov. Palin on Thursday said the arrest was "not a state government matter" and so no comment or interviews on the topic would be forthcoming.McClatchy Washington Bureau
Palin soap opera: Drug in Levi's mom's case is oxycontin
Zaz Hollander | Anchorage Daily News
Dec 19, 2008
DEA Continues Absurd Assault on Medical Cannabis
Yesterday the Drug Enforcement Agency continued their assault on medical cannabis providers, raiding a dispensing collective in San Fernando Valley. The enforcement officers continued to confiscate medicine, computers, and patient records, but made no arrests. Why? How can this law enforcement agency continue to bully dispensing collectives out of money, medicine, and records with no accountability or fair trial for those assaulted? not that I believe these folks should be prosecuted, but isn't that normal protocol? You raid. You confiscate. You arrest someone and charge them with the crime you busted down their door for? It is maddening to me to think that this rogue group is senselessly and randomly exerting unnecessary force in the community to simply confiscate people's medicine supply. It is like the monkeys are running the zoo or something.
Dec 17, 2008
New ideas
I am hopeful to launch two new interactive pages on this site. One would be a questions page. There are many folks who have asked me a number of different questions regarding medical cannabis, the legal system, and providing food-based and other types of cannabis medicines. I hope to develop a forum where folks can post respectful questions and I can answer them. This dialogue will help to educate and inspire others and I look forward to using my experience to help others make a difference.
Another project I am in the process of developing is a political prisoner outreach and communication program. There are many others working to help keep those in the community that are either in prison, awaiting court actions, or have been imprisoned in the past in touch with what is going on in the community. I hope to add to that vehicle and create an electronic system to submit communications, post communications from the political prisoners to the community, and I hope to possibly create a video system where others can submit video communications from prisoners to their families who may not be capable of meeting with them. This program can help keep those suffering grounded and keep the folks in the movement appraised of their situations and what we can do to help. Stay tuned.
Dec 15, 2008
From My Family to Yours...Merry Christmas
It is great to be sharing in the holidays with my family and friends this year. I am allowed six hours of free time a week, so last Saturday we got to go see the tree lighting downtown. It was cold, but wonderful. This is definitely one of the better Christmases considering I thought I was going to spend it in prison. Life is good. Be well this Christmas and be safe. Look around you and find someone to be nice to everyday from now to Christmas. It makes a difference.
Dec 12, 2008
DEA Says it Has a Policy of Not Arresting Medical Marijuana Patients
Posted in Chronicle Blog by Scott Morgan on Fri, 12/12/2008 - 12:25am
Months ago, Judiciary Committee chairman John Conyers (D-MI) sent a pointed inquiry to the DEA demanding an accounting of the costs and methodology behind the federal raids against medical marijuana dispensaries in California. DEA’s response(pdf) recently became available and contains some interesting information, including this: It’s not really news that DEA avoids arresting patients, but it’s remarkable to see it in writing. This serves to remind us that DEA in fact bares no legal obligation whatsoever to enforce federal marijuana laws in states that have approved medical use. The organization’s enforcement priorities with regards to medical marijuana are shaped by politics, not a sense of legal obligation, thus patients have been quietly left off the battlefield in recognition of the obscene PR fiasco that would result if they were visibly targeted. Keep this in mind if Obama’s pledge to end medical marijuana raids is met with resistance from anyone who claims that "federal law must be enforced." DEA’s concession also helps to illuminate the complete incoherence of any argument that state-level marijuana reforms are rendered impotent in the face of incongruous federal drug laws. Such reforms have enormous practical value by dramatically reducing the threat of arrest and conviction under state laws, which have always been the only real threat facing individual users.
DEA does not investigate or target individual "patients" who use cannabis, but instead the Drug Trafficking Organizations (DTOs) involved in marijuana trafficking.
…
Again, the agency does not target individual users who are
engaged in "simple possession" of the drug - even though they too are violating federal law and entitled to no immunity.
Dec 11, 2008
DEA Response to John Conyers. Pretty Flimsy and Cynical
After long deliberations on the phone with the Judiciary Committee, I was able to find the response from the DEA to John Conyers from his April inquiry into the actions against medical cannabis providers in California. The response is both inaccurate and obviously cynical. Enjoy.
http://judiciary.house.gov/hearings/pdf/Nelson080725.pdf
http://judiciary.house.gov/hearings/pdf/DEA-Attachment080725.pdf
Oct 22, 2008
Why The U.S. Government Hates Me
In an "amazing" turn of events, the United States Attorney has decided to appeal my sentence. Apparently two years of community confinement and five years of direct supervision and complete loss of liberty is not punishment enough for a major criminal like me. My brownie making for cancer patients is apparently such a severe crime that it is unthinkable that a Judge would not take me away from my family for several years and ensure my demise even further than the PTSD and imminent bankruptcy have already done.
Forget that the prosecutor at the sentencing quoted the WRONG case for her evidence of federal superiority and that she had no idea what the actual decision of the Supreme Court's response reflected. Forget that she had no evidence of harm done by my products and offered a lame "there was concern," when questioned in depth about her allegations. Forget she did not even bother to google my case or even medical marijuana in general to prepare for her encounter with the fate of my family. Yes. Even though she brought no evidence of harm I had caused and did not even have the courtesy to do minimal research in what can only be categorized as laziness or arrogance, the Judge was somehow wrong in sentencing me to anything less than cold hard jail time, securing my family members would suffer greatly and my children would be scarred for life. Well Mrs. Stewart, I would suggest that if you are determined to have me put in jail for 30 months for providing food-based cannabis medicines to sick and dying California citizens then do your homework before coming to court. You could have looked it up on your Blackberry while we waited for the court to hear our case.
The fact that you and your colleagues are filing an appeal is nothing short of vindictive. Forcing me to rehash the fear and anguish I lived with every day for 11 months it disturbing. Further depleting my resources by forcing me to pay attorneys to fight this appeal is mean spirited. Dragging my name through the mud one more time for what I can only imagine to be some absurd reason is unacceptable. Your office does a disservice to the people you serve with this wasteful and unnecessary witch-hunt because you were unsatisfied with the Judge's decision.
What amazes me about this callous and cruel decision to appeal my sentencing is the resources and time being wasted to carry on this insane and immoral act. It is obvious you did not waste too much of the taxpayers money preparing for the sentencing, but lets not ask for a do-over at the taxpayers expense by forcing the 9th Circuit Court to give you a second shot at hanging me high. Judge Wilken was very fair and gave you ample opportunity to make a case against me. The sentencing was over 5 months from when i took my plea. There was ample time to get the work done. What happened? Surely you do not believe that the Judge was being an activist because she was unimpressed by your lack of knowledge about the situation at hand. Maybe it was the patient who chased you down outside f the courthouse and demanded that you quit harassing medical cannabis patients. I can understand how that would be frustrating, but that is not a reason to take your anger out on me. The Judge felt that my unique situation was worthy of downward departure and she exercised her discretion for which I am grateful. Let it go.











