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Texas
Straight Talk
www.house.gov/paul
Politicizing
Pain
By
Rep. Ron Paul
April
29, 2008
K.K. Forss does not
claim medical marijuana solves all his problems. His
pain from a ruptured disc in his neck is debilitating. He
is unable to go to work or to the
First
Baptist
Church
he used to attend because of the pain and muscle spasms.
Taxpayers through Medicare spend over $18,000 a year on his
various medications. Half of those drugs are
strong narcotics. The other half address the
various side-effects brought on by the first half, such as nausea,
heartburn, heart palpitations, difficulty sleeping, and muscle
spasms.
No, marijuana would
not completely address all his pain, but it made a tremendous
difference in the quality of his life when he tried it for over a
year. It helped him regain 38 pounds he had lost.
It calmed his muscle spasms and helped him sleep.
In short, it alleviated many side effects and greatly reduced his
need for other expensive medications. Mr. Forss
estimates that being allowed to use medical marijuana would save
taxpayers at least $12,000 a year in medications he would no longer
need. He would also be able to work occasionally
and attend some church services.
Scientists at the
University of California at Davis recently completed a study that
backs up Mr. Forss’s experience, finding that cannabis
demonstrates significant relief of neuropathic pain. Many
in government call for more studies while people like K.K. Forss
suffer. More studies will not change what many
patients already know, and that is for some, medical marijuana helps
their pain. But over-reaching government gets in
the way.
K.K. Forss lived in
constant fear of federal and state officials so he eventually
stopped taking medical marijuana and switched to his more rigorous
and expensive pill regimen. Presently, twelve
states have passed legislation allowing marijuana, under certain
conditions, to be prescribed legally by doctors for patients who
could benefit from it. K.K. Forss lives in
Minnesota, where it is not yet legal. However,
even if it is legalized by the state, Mr. Forss will still have
plenty to fear from the Federal government, as cannabis dispensaries
and clinics that operate under these state laws are still under fire
from the Drug Enforcement Administration.
In other words, the
federal government sees fit to use our tax dollars to raid state
sanctioned healthcare clinics, to imprison and fine patients and
operators, in order to compel people like Mr. Forss to be bedridden
and overmedicated at great taxpayer expense every single day.
The Federal
government should recognize that states have the authority to decide
these issues. This affords all states the
opportunity to see which policies are most beneficial. As a
Congressman and a physician, I strongly advocate that healthcare
decisions should be made by doctors and patients, not politicians or
federal agents, which is why I am an original co-sponsor of the
recently introduced “Medical Marijuana Patient Protection Act”
which would bar the Federal government from intervening in such
doctor/patient relationships that violate no state law.
The bottom line is
that K.K. Forss should be treated as a free American. Mr.
Forss is one of many who would like to use marijuana medicinally
because it helps him. Politicians and bureaucrats
have no right to interfere.
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