Why Medical Marijuana Dispensaries Will be Bad for
Kauai
By Alfred P. Sarmento, Kauai Christian Voters 4/14/2015
LINK TO SENATE BILL PASSED TODAY, Does not include amendments!
Wednesday, April 8 began with a detailed briefing from
Representative Marcus Oshiro, (Democrat HD 46, from Oahu’s Wahiawa), and Hawaii
Family Forums’ Director of Community Relations, Allen Cardines Jr., (Pastor of
Hope Chapel, Nanakuli), at Aloha Church in Lihue. They both spoke on the very
real, very negative, consequences of medical marijuana dispensary bills, HB 321
and SB 879, now being fast-tracked at our state legislature. The day ended with
testimony at the Kauai County Council chambers, asking the State Legislature to
give Kauai and Hawaii’s other counties, “Home Rule”, control over marijuana dispensaries,
a right afforded counties in 16 states on the mainland. Resolution No. 2015 –
37 was proposed by Council Chair Mel Rapozo, and it asks our state legislature to
reconsider the rush to create marijuana dispensaries, while continuing to allow
medical marijuana cultivation, and to “go slow”, so communities on Kauai can
gauge the impacts of specific provisions of any bill ultimately approved. The resolution
was offered with specific floor amendments, proposed by Councilman Ross Kagawa
that would build a better bill for Kauai’s communities. There was serious
debate and the resolution was passed by a vote of 4 to 3 at the Kauai County
Council. Kauai is the only county in Hawaii that has taken a stand against this
onrushing bill. Interestingly this fact has yet to be reported in news outlets,
as we seem to be on an express train to allowing marijuana dispensaries here in
Hawaii, without any adequate public input from the neighbor islands.
To begin with, let’s be very clear here; no one I know is
interested in keeping anyone away from the medication they need, be it
marijuana or anything else. Hawaii's medical use of marijuana law was enacted
on June 14, 2000, as Act 228. This act provided for medical marijuana as a relief
for seriously ill individuals in Hawaii. While this law recognized the
beneficial use of marijuana in treating or alleviating pain and other symptoms
associated with certain debilitating illnesses, it was silent on how patients could
obtain medical marijuana if they or their caregivers were unable to grow their
own supply. Hawaii’s more liberal, secular minded legislators, claim this is
why the marijuana dispensary bills are being considered and fast tracked this
legislative session. However, much has changed since 2000 that brings the
necessity of marijuana dispensaries while allowing the growing of marijuana for
medical use into serious question.
We as Christians, must be concerned with the negative
effects of bad public policy on our communities, neighborhoods and families.
Make no mistake there will be diversion of medical marijuana from any
dispensary (ies) built that will end up with our youth getting their hands on
today’s super-concentrated THC products offered for sale. THC, (tetrahydrocannabinol),
is the ingredient of the cannabis plant, (marijuana), that contains the heavy narcotic
drug and psychoactive effects. Also, marijuana ostensibly grown by and for card
holders will be stolen, as well as diverted, (sold), for cash. It already is.
Marcus Oshiro stated that there has been a concerted effort to avoid medical and law enforcement committees for the medical marijuana bills in both the State House and Senate. Moreover, lobbyists for marijuana legalization groups such as NORML, the Marijuana Policy Project, and the Drug Policy Alliance have been prowling the halls of the Hawaii’s state legislature with money to spend on lawmakers looking to cash in. Research shows that they collectively have between 80 and 100 million dollars available to push legalization legislation nationwide. Make no mistake, these medical marijuana bills, in un-amended or poorly amended format, are nothing more than gigantic steps toward marijuana legalization here in Hawaii. Only some Christian groups and a minority of decent politicians are looking at the long-term implications and impacts that marijuana dispensaries, coupled with continued cultivation, will have on our keiki, teens, young adults and our communities. Gone is the time you could trust your local politician to put the needs and safety of your community first. We live in a brave new world where morals are a fungible commodity, something to be sold, then debated, if at all, by the secularists in power today.
Online Effects of Marijuana Strains For Sale at an Arizona Dispensary 4/14/2015
Presenters were adamant that the basic model the Hawaii state legislature was following, un-amended, was closely related to the marijuana disasters in Arizona, Colorado and California. These states have seen many negative impacts from the misuse of medical marijuana dispensaries, and in the case of Arizona and Colorado, huge increases of child and teen abuse of the now decriminalized, actually, de facto legalized, marijuana. Many thoughtful citizens believe that once these dispensaries are in operation they will forever change our island communities in negative ways. Medical marijuana dispensaries and marijuana decriminalization legislation send children, teenagers and even young adults mixed messages. On the one hand marijuana is likened to to a “natural herb”, but it is far more truthfully an extremely dangerous, psychoactive drug with a great potential to destroy young minds, lives, families and careers.
Online Prices at an Arizona Medical marijuana Dispensary 4/14/2015
Much of the presentation was to warn us of just how bad a
problem Arizona, Colorado and California’s marijuana dispensaries have become
in those states and in nearby states. My generation is quite familiar with the
Woodstock recreational use of cannabis. An interesting graphic clearly showed
that from 1960 to 1983 the average THC content of marijuana was 2% or less. By
2011 the average THC content of marijuana was 11.4%. In Colorado, from 2010 to
2014, there has been an increase in the average THC concentration of marijuana
grown there, from about 12 percent to over 25 percent today. The increase of
cultivated marijuana’s potency is reliably expected to continue. The pakalolo being
hybridized and grown today is far more potent than that available in our youth.
And today, thanks to the manufacturing of legal, concentrated, THC laden
products, in Arizona, Colorado, there are now products containing THC of as
great as 80 to 90% purity. In Arizona and Colorado, legal, edible baked goods
like cookies and brownies, as well as candy and treats are being sprayed with a
THC “spray”, (a clear concentrated form of THC liquid). This gives the
purchaser huge doses of the THC drug in forms that appeal to children and
teens. Gummy bears, gummy worms, chocolate bars, lozenges, cotton candy and
other types of traditional candy, often indistinguishable from their “normal”
counterparts, are being sold for “medicinal use” in marijuana dispensaries. Even
a cursory inspection of mainland medical marijuana dispensaries and states
where marijuana has been decriminalized show that big business is involved,
soaking up the big cash generated. Big mainland pakalolo companies are not very
likely to care about Kauai’s communities! Already these products are finding
their way illegally into many other states in the US, where they are sold to
abusers. Extremely dangerous to manufacture, butane gas based, “BHO oil”, “shatter”
and “waxes” are manufactured for consumption in Arizona and Colorado, then are sold
in medical marijuana dispensaries. These
are extremely dangerous concentrates, containing 75% to 90% pure THC. The
strains of cannabis cultivated today in decriminalized states can be 20 to 30
percent or more THC and they hybridize out the CBD component as well.
Types of candy containing THC concentrates available on the mainland -
Courtesy Rep. Marcus Oshiro
Courtesy Rep. Marcus Oshiro
CBD? What is that you ask? Well, recent medical research has
been on the CBD component of marijuana. CBD, (“Cannabidiol”), appears to be the
most medically useful component of the cannabis plant. Any search on CBD will come
up with many recent news stories relating to basic medical research showing its
anecdotal usefulness for children and some adults with certain forms of
epilepsy. Cannabis strains such as “Charlotte’s Web” are showing promise in some
medical marijuana research. These strains have been crossbred and hybridized to
minimize THC while maximizing CBD. These products are actually now being sold
right here on Kauai in places like Hanapepe’s Westside Pharmacy, where CBD oil is
for sale, (@ $45.00 per tincture of CBD oil), as well as on Amazon.com and
other online retailers. They are legally selling CBD oil because it is
manufactured from marijuana strains classified as hemp not marijuana, (THC
content less than .3 %). Marijuana, with high concentrations of THC, are still federally
classified as a Schedule I Narcotic, and are federally illegal, along with
other very dangerous drugs with high abuse rates and practically no medicinal
value such as LSD and heroin. Keep in mind that pharmacists and doctors
throughout Kauai warn that even CBD oil can have great side effects, can
interfere with anti-seizure medications, and are dangerous, especially for
children. They note that true double-blind studies on the usefulness and safety
of CBD have not been done. What studies that have been done are more anecdotal
than scientifically useful, and often show patients dropping out due to the
many side effects of CBD oil.