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Media Advisory: Medical marijuana protest to return to Green campaign (Wisconsin)
Media Advisory: Medical marijuana protest to return to Green campaign
office Wednesday
WHAT? Protest at Mark Green's Campaign Office
WHERE? Mark Green's campaign office 1915 S. Webster, Allouez, Wi.
WHEN? Wednesday, October 18 @ 10:00am
Background: (WHO? and WHY?)
Jacki Rickert, founder of Is My Medicine Legal Yet?, (www.immly.org)
suffers from two incurable medical conditions, Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome,
and Advanced Reflex Sympathetic Dystrophy. Jacki has found that
marijuana helps treat these painful and debilitating illnesses, and with
assistance from her physician, now deceased, she was approved to receive
medical marijuana from the federal government's Compassionate IND
program. However, the program was closed to new patients, and the 8
medical marijuana patients already in the program were grandfathered in.
The program's 5 surviving patients continue to receive marijuana from
the government to this day. Congressman Mark Green has been asked about
his stance on medical marijuana, and he has written, "I believe current
medical options are superior to legalizing an addictive and dangerous
illegal drug". Jacki wants to know what medical options he's speaking of
to treat her incurable conditions, since she has yet to find these
superior medical options that he speaks of.
Jacki Rickert went to Mark Green's office on October 10 with a letter,
(http://www.immly.org/jacki2green.htm) asking him to tell her about
these "superior medical options". He has yet to respond. The staffer in
Mark Green's office said they would give this issue some thought, but
when WGBA NBC 26 television asked for their stance, Mark Green's
Campaign manager Mark Graul laughed and said that he didn't believe "the
majority of Wisconsinites would want to legalize drugs". Mark Green's
office figured they could just ignore Jacki since she came from far
away, and is in a wheelchair. However, Jacki's supporters, including
other medical marijuana patients, are coming back to his office to find
out what these "superior medical options" are.
For more information contact:
Eric Tatera (920) 713-0230 (event coordinator in Green Bay)
Jacki Rickert (715) 926-4950 (Mondovi)
Gary Storck (608) 241-8922 (Madison)
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(This blog post was published by StoptheDrugWar.org's lobbying arm, the Drug Reform Coordination Network, which also shares the cost of maintaining this web site. DRCNet Foundation takes no positions on candidates for public office, in compliance with section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, and does not pay for reporting that could be interpreted or misinterpreted as doing so.)
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The New York Times reports that the value of traditional Alzheimerâs medications has been dramatically overstated:
More and more often, it seems, drugs that were widely thought to be effective against serious illnesses turn out to show little or no value when tested in large, impartial clinical trials insulated from drug company influence.
â¦
These discouraging results speak mostly to the desperate need for effective new treatments for Alzheimerâs.
Desperate need for effective new treatment, huh? Look no further. In fact, marijuana may eliminate the need for Alzheimerâs treatments altogether, since it seems to actually prevent the onset of the disease.
I have enough experience with Alzheimerâs to know that families confronted with it will usually try anything. Itâs ironic to think that the family values fanatics who arbitrarily oppose medical marijuana may soon find themselves shoving a bong in grandmaâs mouth.
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When I read the autobiography of 20th Century Salvadoran revolutionary leader Miguel Marmol some years ago, one phrase from the book stuck with me. When Marmol talked about the tedious, day-to-day organizing over the long-term to build a revolutionary movement, he called it "trabajo de hormigas," or "ant work." I thought the term was especially apt and evocative, suggesting the unglamorous, but necessary, laying the groundwork for change.
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