Jan 21, 2009
Medical Marijuana, Obama, patients
Dear President Obama:
Like millions of Americans, I choked up watching you take office Tuesday. And like hundreds of millions -- maybe billions -- around the world, I watched and listened to your inaugural address, riveted by the moment.
One line jumped out at me: "We will extend a hand," you said, "if you are willing to unclench your fist." Your words were directed at hostile governments around the world, but they also embody how hundreds of thousands of suffering Americans view their own government.
I'm speaking of people like my old friend Phil Alden in California and Rhonda O'Donnell in Rhode Island -- people who, with the recommendation of their doctor and the approval of their state governments -- have found that medical marijuana helps them cope with life-threatening illness. In Phil's case the illness is AIDS. In Rhonda's, it's multiple sclerosis.
Phil and Rhonda and hundreds of thousands like them live in daily fear of our government. They and any who help them obtain medical marijuana face the risk of federal arrest and prosecution for simply trying to live, for simply trying to maintain some dignity in the face of terrible illness.
You promised during the campaign to end our government's insane war on the sick, and you were right to do so. Now that you are president, let our own government be the first to unclench its fist.
Thank you.