Proposals for Marijuana Legalization in N.H. |
Posted by CN Staff on February 19, 2013 at 05:22:55 PT By Sarah Palermo Source: Concord Monitor New Hampshire -- State lawmakers filed bills promoting a wide range of marijuana legalization this session, bills that have received widely varying reactions. At one end, a bill with broad support would allow people with certain chronic illnesses to use marijuana. At the other, a bill treats the cannabis plant like any cultivated vegetable or herb. Gov. Maggie Hassan supports allowing regulated access to medical marijuana “with controlled and limited dispensing,” but does not support legalization or decriminalization, according to her spokesman, Marc Goldberg. Former governor John Lynch vetoed medical marijuana bills in 2009 and 2012. The medical marijuana bill currently in the House Health, Human Services, and Elderly Affairs Committee has 14 sponsors: six Democrats and eight Republicans, including four senators. The bill is due for its first hearing Thursday. It would allow patients with a professional diagnosis of cancer, glaucoma, HIV, AIDS, hepatitis C, ALS, muscular dystrophy, Crohn’s disease, Alzheimer’s disease or multiple sclerosis to possess up to 2 ounces of marijuana. The bill would also allow registered distributors to possess up to 192 plants and seedlings plus 32 ounces of usable marijuana. Rep. Mark Warden, a Manchester Republican, seeks to erase all criminal penalties for marijuana possession from state law. It’s a move he called “the tomatoes bill.” “It does make some of the other bills look more palatable,” he said, “but was not my intention at all. I wanted to have the conversation, the debate about cannabis and people’s free choices.” It was a crime when he was arrested at age 17. “We’ve got high school kids with a criminal record indefinitely because they don’t do enough to annul it. Everyone wants to do medical marijuana because you want to help the sick people,” he said. “I’m just looking to carve out a little bubble for regular people possessing less than an ounce.” “We never like to legislate based on poll results, but it sure makes it easier when we can at last say that public opinion is on the side of legalization, and more so all the time,” he wrote. “I don’t think there’s any one of us who wouldn’t say it probably helps people feel better and deal with pain, but it’s not curing cancer, it’s not curing arthritis, it’s not curing any other disabilities. . . . We would support anything the FDA did case studies on and has findings that say it’s good, it works, let’s do it,” he said. “That hasn’t happened and there’s reasons for that.” CannabisNews -- Cannabis Archives Home Comment Email Register Recent Comments Help |
Comment #8 posted by jetblackchemist on February 23, 2013 at 19:08:29 PT |
David Cahill, chief of the Sunapee Police Department...there's a reason that the FDA has not reviewed studies of cannabis, it is a schedule I substance, placed there at the behest of Richard Nixon; not by facts or studies. As a schedule I substance; therapeutic study is not allowed. The FDA approves many drugs that kill every year; cannabis has never caused a single death. I have over an 180 IQ, I graduated college with a 3.98 in engineering, I smoked every day and practically all day, when I was in college. Not now, 20 years later...I have too much to lose because of; these draconian unbalanced laws in my state, alcohol is much worse in every way; but still legal nonetheless. The gateway theory has been studied; and found to be a fallacy by the way. I find it amazing that many of those sworn in to uphold a law, like yourself; know nothing about what they are upholding as law...at least you have to find it incredulous; that murderers, rapists, molesters etc. serve less time; and get a revolving door policy because jails and prisons are filled with non violent crime arrests. I would hope any law enforcement that reads this; takes it upon themselves to educate themselves and each other, on issues in their field instead of echo fallacies...that make people assault you with attacks questioning your intelligence. Good day and be safe out there. [ Post Comment ] |
Comment #7 posted by Paul Pot on February 21, 2013 at 00:03:05 PT:
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What lying scumbags the cops are.
Cops should not be able to influence legislation.
They are literally writing their own job specs.
They work for us not the other way around. [ Post Comment ] |
Comment #6 posted by disvet13 on February 19, 2013 at 19:05:11 PT:
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the fda hasn't done any studies. brilliant. why is that? control and money. it doesn't cure cancer? watch rick simpsons hemp oil cure. if it don't cure it, it sure looks healing to me. it sure seems to be the pain med cancer victims want the most. it doesn't cure arthritis? given a choice, with over 36 years of total body damage and ptsd while serving honorably and with good conduct in hell i choose marijuana and my guns. i'm sick to death of politicians and lawyers lawurinating so they can reinvent government. [ Post Comment ] |
Comment #4 posted by Hope on February 19, 2013 at 11:13:27 PT |
More power to him! Chief Cahill. Think, man. Think! [ Post Comment ] |
Comment #3 posted by schmeff on February 19, 2013 at 09:33:12 PT |
David Cahill is proof that a functioning brain is not required to become a police officer. "...it’s not curing cancer, it’s not curing arthritis, it’s not curing any other disabilities...", so Police Chief Cahill is against it (cannabis). One could point out that aspirin doesn't cure any disease, and that insulin doesn't cure diabetes. If the big brain of Chief Cahill knows what DOES cure cancer or arthritis, he's not sharing it with us, but presumably he's against the billions of dollars that millions of people spend to treat cancer and arthritis. Leaps of logic do not occur amongst the synapses of Cahill's atrophied brain cells, and if David Cahill wasn't too stupid to realize how poorly his own brain functions, one might understand his concern about the possibility of killing brain cells. [ Post Comment ] |
Comment #2 posted by The GCW on February 19, 2013 at 06:16:51 PT |
The old Gov. vetoed. The New Gov. is good. At the very least, medical cannabis is probably coming to New Hampshire. [ Post Comment ] |
Comment #1 posted by FoM on February 19, 2013 at 05:23:59 PT |
That sounds great to me! [ Post Comment ] |
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