Thursday, March 28, 2024

Cancer Patients Should Just Buy Marijuana On The Streets, Says Alabama Senator

Creating situations where Alabamans must jeopardize their safety to receive the medical treatment they need, appears to be Sen. Jim McClendon’s modus operandi.

You shouldn’t expect an Alabaman politician who voted in favor of the state’s deeply unpopular anti-abortion law to also have the clearest elucidations on cannabis. Yet you can still be stunned, as we are, by what State Sen. Jim McClendon used as reasoning not to support Alabama’s current proposed medical marijuana legislation.

In an interview with the Matt & Aunie program on Birmingham’s Talk 99.5 radio station, the hosts asked McClendon his reasoning behind voting against the medical marijuana bill. His reasoning resembled those conservatives have made in Texas as well, stating any loosening of the law will eventually lead to full-blown recreational cannabis reform.

cancer patient marijuana
Photo by FatCamera / Getty Images

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“I guess what bothers me as much as anything is I know what we’re doing is, some time along the way we are going to open a door that will eventually lead to recreational marijuana,” McClendon said. “I figure as long as I can kind of push against that door the better it will be.”

But it’s what McClendon said regarding access to marijuana that proves shocking. When Matt Murphy, one of the two radio hosts, suggested that cannabis was already in his district and that meeting with cancer patients helped by medical marijuana, McClendon was nonplussed. His stance—if they can get marijuana, why should I legalize it?

“Well if there is someone that needs it, let’s say there is someone doing the cancer treatment, they have nausea problems and they need something to control it, they can get it!” McClendon said.

Andrea Lindenberg, the other program host, was frustrated and pushed back. McClendon’s views was forcing normally law-abiding citizens suffering from cancer into becoming criminals. In fact, they were potentially risking their lives with whatever product they can get on the streets, which could be mixed with a deadly dose of fentanyl.

RELATED: How Safe Is It To Smoke Marijuana Every Day?

“They’re not too worried about that,” McClendon dismissed.

Again, maybe this shouldn’t be all that startling. Thwarting the safety of his constituency, creating situations where Alabamans must jeopardize their safety to receive the medical treatment they need, appears to be McClendon’s modus operandi. Maybe he can find a better sense of honor on the streets.

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