PhillyNORML East Coast Correspondent

7 responses to “Pain Politics – Medical Cannabis In New Jersey”

  1. The WeedMaps.com Blog » If “cops don’t make laws, they just enforce them”, why are police opposing marijuana legalization? – 5655th Edition

    [...] of New Jersey’s Fraternal Order of Police that “I’ve heard in California there’s a lot peripheral crime ar…, I get that from the [...]

  2. The WeedMaps.com Blog » If “cops don’t make laws, they just enforce them”, why are police opposing marijuana legalization? – 5645th Edition

    [...] of New Jersey’s Fraternal Order of Police that “I’ve heard in California there’s a lot peripheral crime ar…, I get that from the [...]

  3. F KRAUTNER

    New Jersey lawmakers pretend they are dealing with PLUTONIUM instead of the harmless plant marijuana really is. There are absolutely no scientific or medical reasons backing the restrictions they impose.

    Many legal drugs are really dangerous like Aspirin and Tylenol which kill many thousands every year, but marijuana has never caused a single death in 5,000 years of recorded history.

    History will not be kind to these atavistic morons. They are hypocrites of the first order.

    DECISION OF DEA ADMINISTRATIVE LAW JUDGE FRANCIS L. YOUNG SEPTEMBER 6, 1988 – pages 53-69 http://www.druglibrary.org/olsen/MEDICAL/YOUNG/young.html

    4. Nearly all medicines have toxic, potentially lethal
    effects. But marijuana is not such a substance. There is no record in
    the extensive medical literature describing a proven, documented
    cannabis-induced fatality.

    – 56 -

    5. This is a remarkable statement. First, the record on marijuana encompasses 5,000 years of human experience. Second, marijuana
    is now used daily by enormous numbers of people throughout the world.
    Estimates suggest that from twenty million to fifty million Americans
    routinely, albeit illegally, smoke marijuana without the benefit of
    direct medical supervision. Yet, despite this long history of use and
    the extraordinarily high numbers of social smokers, there are simply no credible medical reports to suggest that consuming marijuana has caused a single death.

    6. By contrast aspirin, a commonly used, over-the-counter
    medicine, causes hundreds of deaths each year.

    7. Drugs used in medicine are routinely given what is called an LD-50. The LD-50 rating indicates at what dosage fifty percent of test animals receiving a drug will die as a result of drug induced toxicity. A number of researchers have attempted to determine
    marijuana’s LD-50 rating in test animals, without success. Simply
    stated, researchers have been unable to give animals enough marijuana to induce death.

    8. At present it is estimated that marijuana’s LD-50 is around 1:20,000 or 1:40,000. In layman terms this means that in order to induce death a marijuana smoker would have to consume 20,000 to 40,000 times as much marijuana as is contained in one marijuana cigarette. NIDA-supplied marijuana cigarettes weigh approximately .9 grams. A smoker would theoretically have to consume nearly 1,500 pounds of marijuana within about fifteen minutes to induce a lethal response.

    9. In practical terms, marijuana cannot induce a lethal
    response as a result of drug-related toxicity.

    – 57 -

  4. If “cops don’t make laws, they just enforce them”, why are police opposing marijuana legalization? | guspini.org

    [...] unfounded assertion by a representative of New Jersey’s Fraternal Order of Police that “I’ve heard in California there’s a lot peripheral crime around these centers [medical marijuana ..., I get that from the different law enforcement agencies around the country who I have regular [...]

  5. TomGanjaFarmerNJ420

    I am a person who suffers from lyme disease which is terribly painful and i have a herniated disc , looks like no medical marijuana for my chronic pain . Thats unfortunate because i didn’t like the physically addictive opiate pain killers i took for a year and was denied there after because of falling a urine test for marijuana . Mind you i was on vicodin and clonopin which seemed like a more dangerous combination than Marijuana with eigther one of those alone . Marijuana allowed me to stay on a lower dose of vicodin than i would have needed yo be on due to the rapid dimishing effects of pain relief because of the tolerance my body seemed to rapidly build taking the 4 7.5 mg pain pills i was prescribed daily . :-x

  6. Todd

    Well with those restrictions NJ is not a Good example for Medical Marijuana that’s for sure.

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