medical canabis in Australia

In the interim period whilst medical cannabis is still illegal, the Australian government has said it would be lenient to patients in need and not prosecute them for using cannabis as a last hope for their survival.
But at the same time they bust the suppliers/growers of the cannabis, this seems not only hypocritical, but and also very detrimental to a dying person.
Wether the cannabis is for chronic pain relief or a last ditched attempt to survive cancer, stopping medication midstream is possibly worse than starting it in the first place, but what choices do these patients have?

No matter what drug is taken to alleviate chronic pain, if the drug is taken away whilst the pain still exists, the pain will be magnified from it's original painful state.
Hence the reason why opiates are so addictive.

Similar is the case with medical cannabis, and possibly worse as cannabis not only helps with pain, but anecdotal evidence suggests it cures some forms of cancer.

The big difference with using cannabis as medication to cure cancer compared to chemotherapy and radiotherapy, is that rather than killing everything, the good ,bad and ugly. Cannabis works with your bodies endocannabinoid system and the cannabinoid receptors and actually enhances the bodies immune system.


Presently the situation is like standing on a ladder changing a light bulb and someone kicks the ladder out from under you, it's cruel, no other words for it.
It's certainly not compassionate !

These sick, dying people want to live and should have the right to access anything that could possibly help, their families naturally feel the same.
Due to public pressure the government has conceded to allow them to access cannabis, but from where? and where is the quality control in which strains of cannabis they source?
Some patients need a high THC strain, others need a high CBD strain of cannabis, some a combination.

Over 90% of the population agree that medical cannabis is needed, so recent polls say. Maybe we need a referendum ?, not next week or next year or five years down the track or when the government and pharmaceutical companies work out how to profit from it.
Maybe a referendum is the sensible solution?

This shouldn't be about the economy, the taxes or profits, we're talking about lives here.

So why not do something positive like the Italian government recent desicion to decriminalise it.
Even better, grow it yourselves (the government) and make sure these sick people get what they need now.
And please don't sell it for the same price as the black market as is happening in US states such as Colorado.
Black market Cannabis is $300 an ounce due to the risk of prison, and loss of freedom.
Cannabis is easily grown and the price should relect this.In Uruguay it's 1$ per gram.

What a sad joke the world has become that a dying person can't try and heal themselves with a non-toxic, non-harmful herb such as cannabis.
Watch the Irvin Rosenfeld story


The following story reflects the point;


Man caught with $1.4m marijuana crop says he grew it to help the sick and dying

HE had a warehouse full of marijuana worth $1.4 million. But Bradley Hindmarsh says he only grew the drug to give to people ravaged by debilitating illnesses such as cancer, arthritis, HIV, insomnia and acute back pain.

All he asked, in return for enough cannabis to last a few weeks, was donations of about $100 to continue funding his operation.

Hindmarsh, 46, faces jail after admitting growing 396 marijuana plants in a warehouse at Riverstone, in Sydney’s northwest.

The NSW Crime Commission, which can seize assets made from criminal activity, is also examining Hindmarsh’s financial affairs in the NSW Supreme Court

But the father of three from Galston said he only supplied his illegal crop to the sick as an alternative to the expense and difficulty of getting treatment by legal means and that he didn’t make a profit.

Hindmarsh, an experienced horticulturist who runs a plant nutrient formula company, said he has long been an advocate for legalising medicinal marijuana to treat crippling illnesses and persistent pain.

“My motivation is that people who need medicinal marijuana should have access to proper, clean marijuana, which I have the ability to grow,” he said.

“I can grow it because I’ve got all of the hardware from my business.

“It might come across as rash but I felt like it was the right thing to do.”

He is now facing jail after he pleaded guilty in Penrith District Court to cultivating a commercial quantity of the plant over a two-month period before police raided his warehouse.

He said he grew so many plants because of his low success rate in getting the best “cannabinoid profile” — the plants’ chemical makeup — for it to be used to reduce pain.

The case comes as medicinal cannabis cultivation is on the brink of being made legal.

However, any move to legalise growing of the drug is guaranteed to be heavily regulated and not allow makeshift operations.

Hindmarsh said: “If it is made legal it should be regulated, and heavily regulated too, so it is as safe as possible.

“It wouldn’t have the problematic effects that a lot of people get from poorly produced marijuana.”

When Hindmarsh appears for sentencing on February 26 he will attempt to tender references from at least 18 people he either supplied cannabis to or others who support him.

The court will decide whether the references be accepted as evidence or if the referees will be cross-examined.

One reference was written by a man from Elizabeth Bay, in Sydney’s east, who said he has been an HIV sufferer since 1986.

“Brad Hindmarsh has given me marijuana on a medical basis to help me and my issues. I am grateful for his assistance and hope the court can take this into account,” he wrote.

Another man from South Australia described how he was suffering prostate cancer and used cannabis oil supplied by Hindmarsh after being referred by a friend who was using it to “combat the ravages of chemo”. “(The friend) indicated that the cannabis oil he was receiving from Brad was helping him ­immensely,” he wrote.

“And that the cannabis oil was far more moderately priced than what I was paying (to buy it from another source off the internet).”

A Redfern woman said in her reference that Hindmarsh supplied marijuana “to my partner while she was dying from breast cancer”.

She wrote: “Having access to medicinal cannabis in the last stages of her illness gave my partner a quality of life she would not have had otherwise. Medicinal cannabis helped my partner deal with the pain. She was lucid and able to be with us more fully in those last weeks and days.”

Hindmarsh’s lawyer Brett Galloway said he will ask for the references to be taken into account when he is sentenced.

“Society’s attitudes have changed significantly towards medicinal marijuana and you would tend to think his reasons for doing what he did might be looked upon favourably when the court imposes a sentence,” Mr Galloway said.

Those attitudes have been ­reflected by recent moves by the federal and NSW governments that are paving the way to legalise marijuana for medical use.

The NSW government has launched clinical trials to examine the impact of cannabis and related products on debilitating illnesses.

The federal government last year introduced legislation, which, if passed, will allow licences to be granted to grow medicinal cannabis.

The developments came after The Sunday Telegraph revealed the suffering of cancer patient Dan Haslam, who led the NSW campaign to legalise medicinal cannabis and convinced Premier Mike Baird to act.

According to the statement of facts, Hindmarsh pleaded guilty after police raided his warehouse on March 26, 2015, and found the plants surrounded by false walls.

Police also found large quantities of liquid plant fertiliser and hydroponic growth pads.

The investigators called Hindmarsh, who went to the warehouse and told police he had been cultivating the plants. He was ­arrested and “made full and frank admissions” that he had been growing the plants for two months.

He told police he was cultivating the cannabis for “medical purposes” and that he gave it to people with medical conditions in exchange for “donations” of about $100 to fund the operation.

“There were approximately six to seven people he would sell the cannabis to, however, he would not disclose who they were. He stated that he did this as he believed he has done no wrong,” the fact sheet said.

reference: http://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/news/nsw/man-caught-with-14m-marijuana-crop-says-he-grew-it-for-the-sick-and-dying/news-story/19880493119e585008894044ee555622