President Obama Makes Case Against His Own Medical Marijuana Policy During SOTU Address

January 25th, 2012
Posted by Mike Liszewski

Over the years, President Obama has said some encouraging things about medical marijuana, but his policy has never matched up. To many, Obama’s 2012 State of the Union address will likely be remembered as the moment when he framed his 2012 campaign for reelection. The SOTU laid out his vision and goals on a number of issues, and while he may not have used the words “medical marijuana” during his speech, the goals and themes he called for in his second term are irreconcilable with certain actions (and inactions) taken by his administration related to safe access.

 “Today, the discoveries taking place in our federally-financed labs and universities could lead to new treatments that kill cancer cells but leave healthy ones untouched.”

Here, Obama has stated a goal, having a treatment available that kills cancer cells, while not harming healthy cells. The potential for reaching this goal through medical marijuana has been known for at least several years, and even the National Institutes of Health has recognized this potential with the Physician Data Query issued by the National Cancer Institute last March. Although the government retracted certain parts of the PDQ in a politically motivated move, the post-retraction version still makes a compelling case for marijuana’s cancer-killing/healthy-cell-preserving potential by reporting that, “[c]annabinoids appear to kill tumor cells but do not affect their nontransformed counterparts and may even protect them from cell death.”

Unfortunately, the Obama administration has not only ignored pursuing medical marijuana to achieve this goal, it has done nothing to make use of its own agency’s findings. This is not only irreconcilable with the goal he laid out in the SOTU, at best it is willful ignorance on the part of the Obama administration to let patients suffer without safe access to the best cancer treatments known.

 “There is no question that some regulations are outdated, unnecessary, or too costly.”

One federal regulation Obama ought to reconsider as being outdated, lacking necessity, and being too costly is 21 CFR 1308.11. This regulation is the manifestation of the Controlled Substances Act in the Federal Record. The necessity of keeping marijuana under Schedule I was only to permit the Attorney General sufficient time to gain more complete scientific information about marijuana. That was four decades and several studies ago (the government’s own PDQ refers to several dozen of these studies), so this is clearly outdated and unnecessary. In terms of costliness, the toll of human suffering of cancer patients should be enough, but the economic drain related to cancer suffering is staggering as well.  The best way for Obama to revisit this regulation would be direct Attorney General Eric Holder to initiate the rescheduling process.

“Let’s never forget: Millions of Americans who work hard and play by the rules every day deserve a Government and a financial system that do the same.”

Among the millions of Americans who work hard and wish to play by the rules are the thousands of providers of medical marijuana located in states that have approved the use and distribution of this medical treatment. Perhaps more than any community, these American entrepreneurs are quite willing to pay their share of business taxes that result from their work to provide safe access to medical marijuana patients who are unable to cultivate to their own medicine. However, in providing medical marijuana in accordance with state law to patients, dispensary operators must deal with a burden that no other legitimately run business have to face, Section 280E of the IRS Tax Code. This provision, which bars anyone from taking tax deductions for business expenses related to Schedule I and II substances, was originally intended to prevent cocaine kingpins from manipulating the tax code to launder their completely illicit profits, but instead the IRS is now manipulating the provision to attack state-approved businesses that provide safe access.

President Obama should not only order Holder to initiate the process to reschedule marijuana, he should also instruct Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner to promulgate a comment in the Treasury Regulations that excludes medical marijuana providers operating in good faith compliance with state law. This would be particularly helpful in the event that marijuana is rescheduled into Schedule II, which would still mean safe access would be in peril related to 280E.

President Obama’s speech last night described the kind of America where safe access to medical marijuana should be readily available, but unfortunately his administration’s actions have been at odds with this goal. Rescheduling marijuana and removing unfair tax burdens on dispensary owners would go a long way in reconciling his goal of an America where patients have safe access to best the cancer treatments available.

4 Responses to “President Obama Makes Case Against His Own Medical Marijuana Policy During SOTU Address”

  1. Ty Palmer Says:

    Understanding the omission is key. Why isn’t cannabis part of that broad statement about cancer? When Americans start to learn that only some interests are truly represented by the man giving that lofty speech, the search for effective governance will begin. Keep the pedal to the metal with your reporting. The world is paying attention, online, mostly anonymously. Our ever action in the medical marijuana community is being scrutinized. We welcome the light.

  2. Eddie, Copperas Cove, TX Says:

    I couldn’t agree with Ty more. The overall effectiveness, efficiency, and competence of the bureaucracy continue to fail all Americans more and more daily. I do not understand for sure why it is, but it seems that there are so many fearful people out there who are unwilling to just do the right thing. This article hit it on the nail. Great job and thank you. I do have a suggestion: Why don’t the collaborative organizations of NORML, ASA and the like get together with the medical professionals (including Dr. Ron Paul) who are true experts in the subject matter and get in their faces? I believe that the most common sense route TODAY would be to solicit the valuable knowledge via every form of media available to us in this great country. Mr. President would hate to have to explain to the countless cancer patients why he behaves as if he is unaware of what needs to happen? Well, if Obama is doing so for political reasons, then We the People are the ones responsible for informing him that we are the ones who voted for him and can keep him in office. I learned a great deal from the “A NORML Life” documentary. Would it be too much to organize a team to follow the leader of the free world on his campaign to distribute the valuable documentary for FREE to his supporters? In fact, we can go further and make the film available at every news stand in the United States. Imagine the potential impact it could have…
    One last thing; Not enough mention of the various methods of ingesting cannabis is made. Not everyone who uses cannabis smokes it in a blunt, bong, or joint. The entire nation needs to know the whole truth about the sacred miracle plant and all that it can really do for mankind.

  3. mjjohn Says:

    and I would also have to agree with ty. and I also just cannot understand with all of the positive evidence of marijuana not only beimg harmless but being helpful, with all of the medical benefits, why is it still suppressed? I can’t understand it and I find it quite frustrating. I just watched it amazing video of people curing skin cancer with cannabis oil, it works there is too much positive proof to deny it.

  4. President Obama Makes Case Against His Own Medical Marijuana Policy During SOTU Address | Growing Marijuana: Medically, legally and ethically Says:

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