Pubdate: Sat, 1 Nov 2008 Source: West Hawaii Today (HI) Copyright: 2008 West Hawaii Today Contact: http://www.westhawaiitoday.com/contact_us/letters/ Website: http://westhawaiitoday.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/644 Author: Jacqueline Harper Marijuana Initiative A MEDICAL USER'S PERSPECTIVE OF THE ISSUE I am truly blessed to live in a country where we can all freely choose our religion, where we have opportunities to be what ever we choose to be in life and also to have and voice our opinion on the issues. However, after reading Ms. Towle,s commentary in the Oct. 29 issue of the West Hawaii Today, I realized I needed to come forward and offer a more factual and intelligent view of the marijuana initiative that is being voted on in this years election. I would love to know where Ms. Towle got her "facts" from. Saying that Mr. Lehman "hasn't a clue as to what's going on in the county" is definitely the pot calling the kettle black. And I quote from the DEA website: "Crystal methamphetamine (ice) is the drug of choice in Hawaii." In my opinion ice is way too easy to get, and way too affordable. Ms Towle, where exactly are you finding low-cost, abundant marijuana on this island? Marijuana is not a gateway drug. I too will argue that point. Let's start with caffeine and alcohol or nicotine. We start our kids on soda when they are still in diapers. We surround them with smoke in our homes from tobacco that's been poisoned by chemicals that have been added by the tobacco companies. The same companies add ingredients that cause you to become addicted in a very short period of time, slowly killing you over time, yet it is legal. Then enter alcohol. How many people are killed by drunk drivers every day? How many families devastated? How many people have ruined their lives, loves or livers because they can't put down that legal bottle of booze? I have lost people I loved because of both of those legal drugs, but oddly enough I have never lost anyone due to their use or someone else's use of marijuana. The drug users that I have known and spoken with said they all started with cigarettes, and beer and caffeine before they tried marijuana (Doesn't that make them the gateway drugs?). A majority of them said they had awful situations and that even though they may have used marijuana, it (marijuana) was not the reason they went on to harder drugs. My husband, Mike, who is a service-connected disabled veteran, has been using medical marijuana both legally and on his own for over 40 years. I have used marijuana medically for over 18 years because of chronic pain. We do not smoke cigarettes and rarely drink alcohol. When we use marijuana medically, we do not go out driving or hang around and try to sell drugs to people on the street corner. We are productive members of our community and society in general. Mike has chronic pain due to injuries that happened in the service. For years he tried to self-medicate with aspirin and ibuprofen only to eat the lining out of his stomach, which left him with GURD. He has prescription narcotics readily available to him through the VA doctors, so many in fact that the Motor Vehicle Department threatened to take his drivers license away from him, so the told the VA to keep their drugs. Marijuana was and is not a gateway drug, it is, however, a way to stay off of narcotics. It is a safe and effective way to deal with pain that is there 24/7 without the cause and effect and side effects of narcotic pain killers. Marijuana has been proven to help in many medical situations and its use has been documented throughout history. Because religion was brought up, I feel compelled to remind everyone that all religions have their own rituals and beliefs, and at some point I am sure that people thought that Christianity was "simply a crock of baloney and needs no further discussion." As a member of the Kona Crime Prevention Committee, Ms. Towle, it would seem that you would like to see our police officers readily available for the more serious crimes. We need to free up the courts for more important matters and to free up space in our jails for the violent offenders. Marijuana may be a low priority but until it is in writing, it doesn't mean anything. One medical marijuana patient that I spoke with, that is within the law, had the Hawaii Police come onto their property, declare them within the legal medical marijuana limits, only to have the DEA come in and seize their medicine 15 minutes later. There is no record of it at the police station. Tell that patient that we don't need a law. Ms. Towle, you were pondering on why the council even considered addressing the issue. They really did not have a choice. Here is the break down. Mr. Lehman produced a petition that as you put it "clearly lacked the legal number of signers" to place the question on the ballot without council. Because of the petition not containing the proper number of signatures the council was forced to vote, and they voted five to four to certify the petition, then they unanimously voted against making the proposed ordinance into law, which sent the vote to the good people of Hawaii County. That is all. The decision they made was to let us, the good citizens of Hawaii vote. There is nothing at all strange there. In June of 2000, Hawaii passed SB 862 HD1, which made Hawaii the first state whose Legislature, as opposed to voter initiative, legalized marijuana for medical use. So, Ms. Towle, I for one would say our state does control our marijuana. Perhaps in the future it we will reform our current laws in order to be able to get our medicine from a dispensary, similar to those in California. I would think that many patients would like that, but until then, we cross the bridges as we come to them. And right now, the bridge we are crossing is Ballot Question 1, Bill No. 335. Ms. Towle, you really need to do some actual research on the history of marijuana, why and how it became an illegal substance and the medical research that does show that there are benefits to the use of marijuana. The facts are all there. How blessed I am where I live in a country that allows the people to choose. Jacqueline Harper Kailua-Kona - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake