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Medical Marijuana & Stem Cell Research
By the Review Editorial Staff
Michigan voters on November 4th will decide on ballot proposals for
Medical Marijuana use and Stem Cell Research, but they will not get a
chance to consider a part-time legislature or advisory referendums
on state tax increases.
This is because Saginaw attorney Greg Schmid and other organizers
abandoned efforts to collect the required 380,000 signatures.
Meanwhile, a Michigan Court of Appeals ruling apparently will block a
November vote on a massive overhaul of the State Constitution, rigged
behind the scenes to aid Democrats.
At this point, nothing on the ballot is generating high-profile emotion that
would match the 2004 ban on gay marriage or the 2006 rollback of affirmative
action.
Political conservatives had their way on both of those issues.
The first initiative, for the part-time legislature, would have cut salaries in
half to about $40,000. Pensions and other benefits also would have been
slashed. Lawmakers would have served mostly in late winter and spring, a system
similar to at least 39 other states.
A key provision of the second plan was to take a statewide vote, every two
years, on each and every tax increase that was passed. The referendums would not
have been binding, but the intent was simply to create public pressure on
legislators.
Greg Schmid
said momentum never was built to even come close to 380,000 names, noting how
organizers were not willing to pay signature agents who stand in front of post
offices and supermarkets, as we all have seen. It was evident by March that the
pair of petition drives was stalling.
Both a part-time legislature and tax referendums would have faced bipartisan
opposition. State Sen. Roger Kahn, and Reps. Andy Coulouris and
Ken Horn all told The Review that they work full-time and then some.
The trio also asserted that if voters are unhappy with taxes, they could throw
incumbents out of office regardless of a statewide referendum.
Legislation to protect these folks from criminal action has become a national
trend. Ballot initiatives are a typical option, in order to protect elected
officials from right-wing charges that they are soft on drugs.
Voter approval of Proposal 1 in November would make Michigan the 13th
state to act on behalf of medical marijuana supporters. Others are Alaska,
California, Colorado, Hawaii, Maine, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Rhode
Island, Vermont and Washington.
The Michigan Coalition of Compassionate Care
has employed Rochelle Lampkin of Detroit as a spokeswoman. She is a
50-something grandmother who contracted MS as a young adult. She says she
neither drinks nor smokes, and she once actually joined neighborhood pickets to
protest at a "drug house" where reefer was sold.
In other words, in no way is Ms. Lampkin a druggie.
Pain behind her eyes a few years ago was becoming unbearable. A fellow MS
sufferer encouraged her to try medical marijuana. She took a few tokes, even
though it was against her principles, and voila - she felt relief that she says
was long-lasting. She now is a regular user but insists she does not ingest
enough to get high.
Debate over Proposal 1 comes on two fronts.
On the law enforcement front, police and prosecutor groups are opposed simply
because marijuana use is illegal and in their estimation, the law is the law. On
the medical front, doctors have mixed opinions on whether marijuana is the best
treatment.
Medics who oppose medical marijuana insist that a prescription drug, Marinol,
contains active THC. Lampkin and dozens of other pot-for-relief advocates have
answered that not only does Marinol fail to offer comfort, but that it costs an
arm and a leg - underscoring allegations that what medical opposition does exist
to these measures stems from greed and protectionist action by the
pharmaceutical industry.
Foes also have asserted that smoking marijuana can cause lung cancer, the same
as cigarettes. Lampkin's response is that she now takes her doses of THC by
drinking tea.
Critics insist that Proposal 1 advocates are using medical marijuana as a
sinister launching point to make the substance legal across the board.
Supporters respond that their proposed law is written with very narrow
definitions regarding who would qualify, possibly 50,000 Michigan
citizens. A doctor's prescription would also be required.
Elected officials in the local communities of Detroit, Ferndale, Ann Arbor,
Flint and Traverse City have adopted largely symbolic ordinances to
allow medical marijuana.
On the flip side, the U.S. Supreme Court has voted 6-3 (as usual)
that even in the 12 states that have passed medical marijuana provisions; users
still are subject to federal prosecution.
Advocates try to shrug off the 2005 ruling when they note that federal
agents almost never pursue an individual's ingestion of the substance.
National debate is best known for a focus on Nancy Reagan. She had joined
her husband, President Ronald Reagan, in a number of conservative and
even ultraconservative causes. But when Nancy learned that her "Ronnie" was
afflicted with Alzheimer's disease - and that stem cell research possibly could
help - she joined progressives to fight the fight.
Michigan's Proposal 2 for stem cell research, similar to Proposal 1 for medical
marijuana, is based on ballot proposals in other states.
Analysts assert that Michigan is among the nation's most restrictive states for
stem cell research. The others are North Dakota, South Dakota, Louisiana and
Arkansas. This means that Michigan researchers are limited to testing stem
cell lines from other states with less restrictive laws.
Advocates of Proposal 2 say the new law would allow research on donated embryos
created during fertility treatments that otherwise would be discarded. Such
research now would constitute a state felony.
Foes are gathered through Michigan Citizens Against Unrestricted Science and
Experimentation. Their title pretty much sums up the reason for their
opposition. Their partners include Right to Life of Michigan, and the
Michigan Catholic Conference. These groups assert that stem cells taken from
adults or umbilical cords are sufficient for research.
Cloning also enters the picture. Foes say that Proposal 2 would open the door to
human cloning. Advocates answer that cloning is a separate issue, and that their
proposal would not make a difference in Michigan exists law.
The independent and non-partisan ballotpedia.org reports that "a sweeping
revision that appeared out of nowhere" contained 19,500 words with 31 revisions.
If you are a government "wonk" person who gets into political intrigue, you may
find yourself entertained by this matter. Otherwise you need not bother, at
least for now.
In a thumbnail sketch, the United Auto Workers website advertised
"Government Reform Proposal: Changing the rules of politics in Michigan to help
Democrats."
This came to the attention of the conservative Mackinaw Center for Public
Policy, which spread the word to the media.
Pity the media.
The whole deal is as complicated as calculus. But just for a sampling, "reform"
would have eliminated two Supreme Court justices and seven appellate
judges in the name of downsizing.
It just so happens that among them all, we have eight Republicans and one
Democrat. Outraged GOP conservatives filed suit in protest.
The Court of Appeals on August 20 banned the "Government Reform
Proposal" from the ballot, describing it as "overly broad." The thing is, some
of these appellate judges are among those who would have lost their jobs.
Therefore, advocates of the ballot scheme are hollering that those appellate
judges should have withdrawn based on conflict of interest.
Governor Jennifer Granholm
and Lt. Gov. Cherry are among Democrats who are washing their hands and
saying they had nothing to do with the ballot proposal, but GOP protesters say
both gave money.
This plan apparently will not join medical marijuana and stem cell research on
the November ballot. Therefore, The Review will invest no more costly ink
in a quest to further explain.
But if you are interested in political intrigue with as many twists as
Watergate, feel free to get onto your Google and explore further.
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