people be considered an act of compassion!?:shrug:
Don't get me wrong, I'm most happy for those people but if supplying them with cannabis is done by the federal government is to be considered an act of compassion, then the government's reservoir of compassion is non-existent when it comes to the millions of other Americans; that could benefit from this.
This is just one small aspect of the bullshit insanity behind the so called "War on Drugs."
Advocates for legalizing marijuana or treating it as a medicine say the program is a glaring contradiction in the nation's 40-year war on drugs - maintaining the federal ban on pot while at the same time supplying it.
Government officials say there is no contradiction. The program is no longer accepting new patients, and public health authorities have concluded that there was no scientific value to it, Steven Gust of the U.S. National Institute on Drug Abuse told The Associated Press. The government has only continued to supply the marijuana "for compassionate reasons," Gust said.
(snip)
One of the recipients is Elvy Musikka, the chatty Oregon woman. A vocal marijuana advocate, Musikka relies on the pot to keep her glaucoma under control. She entered the program in 1988, and said that her experience with marijuana is proof that it works as a medicine.
They "won't acknowledge the fact that I do not have even one aspirin in this house," she said, leaning back on her couch, glass bong cradled in her hand. "I have no pain."
Thanks for the thread, xchrom.