Write
your Texas Legislators! Support TX HB 594, Rep. Elliott Naishtat's affirmative
defense bill for medical marijuana patients. It will NOT protect them from
arrest or provide a legal way for them to obtain their medicine. However,
law enforcement usually does not arrest people they know to be legitimate
medical patients.
Animal and human mother's milk are packed full of cannabinoids. Breast milk
is the largest natural source of cannabinoids in the world except for the
cannabis plant (marijuana/marihuana). The true facts are cannabis plants and
our bodies have inborn occurring endocannabinoids or signaling molecules that
activate cannabinoid receptors within our brains. Endocannabinoids are essential
to nurturing new life. Some scientists speculate that cannabinoids play a
protective role in the brain, slowing the rate of disease.
Patients testify to Cannabis' help in treating post traumatic stress, chronic pain, multiple sclerosis, gastrointestinal (GI) tract disorders, Alzheimer's, Cancer, epilepsy, glaucoma, hepatitis C and HIV/AIDS and more! They swear it is an effective safer replacement for very dangerous pharmaceuticals.
TX HB 594 provides a small amount of comfort to doctors, and patients plus saves taxpayers money. If 5% of 66,117 marijuana arrests in Texas in 2006*, costing Texas taxpayers $655 million, were medical patients, taxpayers wasted $32,750,000 chasing sick people who presented no threat to anyone. And $655 millon arresting people who are doing less harm to their own bodies than those who use alcohol, tobacco or pharmaceuticals!
Support TX HB 184 to remove the possibility of jail time for someone in possession of an ounce or less of marijuana. It is morally bankrupt to punish nonviolent adults for making a safer health choice, cannabis or marijuana, compared to other medicinal/social drugs.
The tobacco, alcohol and prescription drug gangs cause more death annually than all illicit drugs! We have better use for our taxes than to spend them having probationers pee in a cup, imprisoning them if they fail. Prisons propagate crime, violence and sexual deviance. Putting nonviolent offenders in this breeding ground is madness.
I am afraid! Violent predators roam free, rape kits go unprocessed, missing children aren't found, schools go under funded, roads need repair while our precious resources are depleted chasing nonviolent drug users.
Less than 1% of US are actually addicted to anything illegal. Treatment is seven times cheaper than prison. Show fiscal responsibility, demand ethical policy!
Restore Justice, the guardian of liberty! Incarcerate more of those morally bankrupt, selling drugs to children or driving intoxicated.
Save lives instead of ruining them. Get tough on violent crime! Murderers and other violent predators roam free, while we police nonviolent adult social, medicinal and religious cannabis use. Limited resources can be better-spent catching pedophiles, rapists and killers. More time could go toward stopping DUI and those selling drugs to minors.
Adult legal social use could cause less alcohol consumption. That would be a good thing for public safety as studies have show alcohol increases violent, aggressive behavior marijuana does not. Maybe it would mean less people driving under the influence of alcohol.
HB 594 and HB 184 are baby steps toward fiscally responsible, ethical policy but they may be the best hope we have for any protection from this legislative session. Encourage your Texas Senators to create similar legislation. Breaking news: the "Texas Medical Marijuana Act of 2013" has been turned in but has not yet been issued a number. Lon Burnam is going to sponsor the bill which would legalize marijuana for medicinal purposes and relates to licensing of marijuana related agencies.
Feel free to copy and paste from this or write
your own rant.
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your Texas Legislators!
*According to Marijuana in Texas: Arrests, Usage and Related Data
by Jon Gettman, Ph.D., October 19, 2009
Links to the statistics quoted & other information:
DRUG WAR FACTS causes of death in US
Criminal
Justice Policy Foundation
Research
on the prison industrial complex
Follow the money - The US federal government spent over $19 billion dollars in 2003 on the WAR ON SOME DRUGS THAT MIGHT COMPETE WITH ALCOHOL TOBACCO AND PHARMACEUTICALS, at a rate of about $600 per second. The budget has since been increased by over a billion dollars. Source ONDCP.State and local governments spent at least another 30 billion. Source: National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse at Columbia University: "Shoveling Up: The Impact of Substance Abuse on State Budgets," January, 2001.
Hemp Revolution?
Can a plant save the planet? Producer-director Anthony Clarke
will make you a believer. This documentary explores the hemp plant's fascinating
history and thousands of uses, as well as the economic and cultural forces
behind its prohibition. Clarke argues that the hype surrounding hemp, also
known as cannabis or marijuana, has overshadowed the plant's benefits as a
source of paper pulp, its uses as a cotton substitute and much more. He comes
down deservedly hard on chemical and drug companies as well as the U.S. government.
You can rent it. Netflix will give you a free trial!
For more Drug News Texas, click the DNT logo!
"Drug problems have
very little to do with any specific drug, but are rooted in the psyches of
the individuals who abuse them." - Jerry Epstein, Drug Policy Forum
of Texas "Incarceration
has never reduced demand for drugs or the problems associated with an illegal
market. What is needed is comprehensive regulation." - Suzanne Wills,
DPFT
On the DPFT Speakers page scroll down to Suzanne Wills and click "How We Got Into This Mess and the Special Interests That Keep Us Here" to:
See
a Power Point Slide Show Now!
Get
Power Point Viewer download FREE!
Drug Policy
Forum TEXAS PETITION
to the government to promote open discussion!
AMAZING VIDEO EVERY PARENT SHOULD WATCH:
The ADHD Fraud: How Psychiatry Makes "Patients" of Normal Children Beware, psychiatrists earn more money from drug makers than doctors in any other specialty and there is a link between psychotropic drugs and violence including school violence!
James Madison, the primary author of the Constitution
of the United States, said this: "We have staked the whole future of
all our political constitutions upon the capacity of each of ourselves to
govern ourselves according to the moral principles of the Ten Commandments."
"In the end, however, no constitution can be self enforcing....For the
Constitution will live only if it is alive in the hearts and minds of the
American people." Roger Pilon, senior fellow and director of CATO's Center
for Constitutional Studies.
The Cato Institute offers copies of its
popular Constitution booklet.
Phone Order: 1-800-767-1241