Tianamen Square and the Drug War
Jerry Stratton
Saturday, June 17, 2000
A teenager, today, sent me e-mail asking for information about the Tianamen Square massacre in China.
On June 14 of this year I seen an episode of “Touched By An Angel” based on the Tianamen Square Demonstrations, and I wanted to know more on the subject. So I did a search on the net in which I found your website. In 8th grade we were told to write an essay on what freedom meant to us. Well I guess you could say that I took my freedom for granted, because I never really thought about how lucky I as an american really am. But that was before I seen pictures of the Tianamen Square Demonstrations that actually made me cry!
The student went on to ask if I had any links to information about Tianamen Square. While searching for information on the About.Com News About Freedom web page, I ran across an obituary for Peter McWilliams. Sometimes the world is just too fucking ironic.
Peter McWilliams was an outspoken critic of the government. He was a critic of the continuing war against gays and lesbians, and especially a critic of the war on drugs.
McWilliams had AIDS. He was taking medication for the disease, and under doctor’s orders and California’s Proposition 215 relegalizing the medicine, held a prescription for medical marijuana. The medicine for AIDS treatment is extremely difficult to keep down. Marijuana is prescribed by doctors to assist AIDS and cancer patients hold down their other medicines. Forced by the federal government off of his prescription, his AIDS medication became a four hour living hell every day. Federal judge George H. King had refused any use of California’s medical marijuana law in McWilliams’ defense. If he were to test positive for marijuana, he would go to jail, a death sentence for someone with AIDS. As I write this, the cause of death is completely unknown on the net. It could be anything from AIDS, or AIDS-related complications, to suicide from having to go through what he needed to do to hold down his AIDS medication, day in and day out.
I have another article here from the San Diego Union Tribune, from August 15, 1997, almost exactly four months before McWilliams’ arrest.
The death of one of the defendants in the first criminal court case involving the state’s Medical Marijuana Initiative has forced prosecutors to drop the charges.
Alan Martinez claimed that he had been using marijuana to successfully combat epileptic seizures for ten years on his doctor’s advice. Jason Miller claimed that he was Martinez’s caretaker, and grew the marijuana legally under Proposition 215.
On July 3, Martinez died in a car accident. “Possibly after a seizure” due to his no longer taking marijuana to combat his epilepsy. Chief Deputy District Attorney Kathleen DeLoe dropped the charges against Miller, saying “I felt it would be real hard to convict Mr. Miller by himself.” Yeah. Doctors said Martinez should use marijuana to end his seizures. The government forces Martinez off of marijuana, and then Martinez dies of a seizure. That sure as hell ought to make conviction “real hard”.
It didn’t stop the authorities from continued persecution of other patients. Do they know that they’re killing people? They must, and yet they keep on killing. DeLoe and King have blood on their hands. And the killings continue.
People dead by the government’s hands at Tianamen Square: Unknown. People dead by the government’s hands in the war on drugs: Unknown. Plus one. Plus one.
July 15, 2000
Well, we know what he died from now. He choked on his vomit while trying to hold down his medicine. This is precisely what he was using medical marijuana to stop. This is precisely why doctors with cancer and AIDS patients recommend the use of medical marijuana.
When will the killings stop?
For more information:
- Obituary for Peter McWilliams
- Peter McWilliams, 50, best selling author, poet, photographer, publisher, libertarian crusader, medical marijuana activist, AIDS patient and cancer survivor, was found dead on the floor of his bathroom, apparently having choked to death after vomiting, for want of medical marijuana.
http://www.marijuananews.com/news.php3?sid=233
Related Peter McWilliams articles:
- Ain’t Nobody’s Business If You Do (http://www.hoboes.com/Mimsy/?ART=140)
- Peter McWilliams died in defense of freedom: this book, an incredibly well-written and well-researched book about “the absurdity of consensual crimes in a free society” was probably his death warrant.
- Raising Peter McWilliams (http://www.hoboes.com/Mimsy/?ART=3)
- The United States government killed an author over a book. Buy that book now.
- Misplaced compassion: more deaths, less dignity (http://www.hoboes.com/Mimsy/?ART=155)
- I fear that a successful “death with dignity” movement will only exacerbate the bad laws and choices that result in excessive pain, and will result in a slippery slope towards more and more assisted suicides.
Related prohibition articles:
- Drug cops on tape (http://www.hoboes.com/Mimsy/?ART=228)
- Drug cops were caught on tape torturing a man for hours, beating a fake confession out of him. How many times does this happen and not get caught on tape?
- Another victim of prohibition (http://www.hoboes.com/Mimsy/?ART=652)
- “Chalk it up as collateral damage, and add Hoffman’s name to that of Isaac Singletary and Anthony Diotaiuto, three deaths of non-violent, non-threatening Floridians in just the last few years, thanks to the drug war.”
- Put safety first: end prohibition (http://www.hoboes.com/Mimsy/?ART=628)
- Prohibition increases crime and it reduces the ability of law enforcement to fight those crimes.
- Medical marijuana returns to Congress (http://www.hoboes.com/Mimsy/?ART=577)
- Congress is considering a states’ rights amendment to the Science-State-Justice appropriations bill forbidding the federal government from overriding state laws allowing patients to use marijuana on a doctor’s orders.
- Prisoner of the war on drugs (http://www.hoboes.com/Mimsy/?ART=524)
- A blog by someone between conviction and sentencing, describing how they (hope to) reduce their sentence by re-entering the black market underworld.
- Project Safe Neighborhoods (http://www.hoboes.com/Mimsy/?ART=495)
- A typical drug war euphemism kills Kathryn Johnston, 92.
- Georgia drug war unfairly targets Indian immigrants (http://www.hoboes.com/Mimsy/?ART=341)
- Federal law enforcement in Georgia has decided to crack-down on Indian-owned convenience stores.
- Cops Say Legalize Drugs: Ask Me Why (http://www.hoboes.com/Mimsy/?ART=310)
- Why do you oppose the drug war? Tell me in fifteen seconds or less!
- Drug war undermining Afghan, Iraqi peace (http://www.hoboes.com/Mimsy/?ART=250)
- Prohibition continues to fund terrorist organizations, and we continue to pour money into maintaining prohibition. Prohibition is, as it has always been, one of the best and easiest means for criminal organizations to grow.
- Fuck everything except marijuana (http://www.hoboes.com/Mimsy/?ART=233)
- That marijuana does not lend itself to the black market forces that make coca, beer, and poppies dangerous should not blind us to the fact that it is their illegality that makes the latter dangerous, not something inherent in the plants they come from.
- Silencing opposition in the war on drugs (http://www.hoboes.com/Mimsy/?ART=234)
- Congressman James Sensenbrenner introduced fast-track legislation to make witnessing or learning of certain drug offenses, without reporting them within 24 hours, a federal crime, punishable by two to twenty years in jail.
- Support the Dope (http://www.hoboes.com/Mimsy/?ART=7)
- Some narcotics officers group is cold-calling for fundraising, and they’re actually prepared for marijuana supporters.
- Bush: We should live by our principles (http://www.hoboes.com/Mimsy/?ART=23)
- President Bush compares Al Qaeda to the mafia, without apparently realizing that, as during alcohol prohibition, it is our prohibition laws that fund criminals.
- The Price of Prohibition (http://www.hoboes.com/Mimsy/?ART=22)
- If we wish to maintain prohibition, we have to understand that we are funding and nurturing terrorism.
- Throwing Gas on the Fire (http://www.hoboes.com/Mimsy/?ART=29)
- If any incident hilights the violence of prohibition and the futility of gun control, the six-year-old killing in Mt. Morris Township, Michigan, is it.
- Will prohibition destroy the Iraq turnaround? (http://www.hoboes.com/Mimsy/?ART=630)
- World prohibition threatens to turn the Iraq turnaround back towards violence and gang warfare.
- Bad laws cause crime (http://www.hoboes.com/Mimsy/?ART=573)
- “Honestly, the level of apathy I’m dealing with is maddening.” Bad laws make it easy to get away with breaking them.
- Oregon’s physician-assisted suicide (http://www.hoboes.com/Mimsy/?ART=347)
- The federal government has the power to keep effective doses of pain reduction medication from patients, but not lethal doses of medication.
- Supreme Court rules against patients and states (http://www.hoboes.com/Mimsy/?ART=198)
- During the early years of the Internet, I heard someone say that the drug war is the root key to the bill of rights. That seems to be all the more true this week as the Supreme Court chose to ignore the federalist arguments in Gonzales v. Raich in order to acquiesce to the drug war.
- The Great Gatsby (http://www.hoboes.com/Mimsy/?ART=331)
- A Lost Generation novel set in the twenties in posh New York, peopled by several Lost Generation characters, the Great Gatsby tells a story of trust, class, and desire on Long Island.