I originally intended to use this space to record my food-related endeavors, it quickly morphed into a convenient means to update friends and family about my life. Not only could any web browser access this eponymous address, but I could maintain some sense of control over the site’s content (unlike, for example, Facebook). I saw obscurity and responsible posting as the primary means of protecting those whom I might mention.
Monthly Archives: September 2010
On Supporting President Obama
And all of us have to have a conversation. . . . and we’ve got to do so at a time when the economy is in a tough situation.
President Barack Obama, 20 September 2010
Our world is complicated. Even limiting the scope of inquiry to the social and economic factors most profoundly affecting the contemporary American economy: our world is complicated. Our world is so complicated, in fact, that it took more than a year of analysis for economists at the National Bureau of Economic Research to determine that the “Great Recession” ended in June of 2009. Our world is more complicated still: on the very day when such timely news was announced, President Obama met with a roomful of his fellow citizens to talk about our personal economic lives as well as the greater American economy. He began by downplaying NBER’s announcement, stating “obviously for the millions of people who are still out of work, people who have seen their home values decline, people who are struggling to pay the bills day to day, [the recession is] still very real for them.”
What do you expect to happen when you don’t zone headshops?
Unregulated environments sure are a boon to business growth. Colorado Springs is home to more than 100 “medical” marijuana dispensaries. Of course, there is no zoning to ensure that these establishments don’t create problems for their neighbors.
Which is why early Sunday morning, my father received a call from his alarm company alerting him to a break-in. Turns out that while the reinforced door of the pot shop that has opened up next door thwarted four thieves from stealing pot, the drywall between my father’s office and the pot shop was more mailable. Of course, there is no marijuana kept on onsite in Colorado dispensaries, but that doesn’t stop thieves from trying. Reported here and here.
For more than 20 years, my father has practiced medicine at the same location. In all that time his office was never broken into. Nothing had ever been stolen. And parents of young children and the elderly felt safe coming for medical treatment.
Since the headshop opened, healthy-seeming young people have begun loitering outside, smoking tobacco. Someone snuck through his back door to steal his microscope. And now, four guys took a sledge hammer to try and get into the shop next door, discovered that no “medicine” was on site, and helped themselves to a variety of actual medical devices and drugs from my father’s office. And let’s not forget the 4 attempted break-ins since the dispensary opened last year.
Do I think that marijuana may have medical uses? I’m not a doctor, but I’ve been told by doctors that yes, it might. Since the signing of the medical marijuana law in Colorado, my father has even put a handful of patients with on the registry–patients with chronic pain or conditions essentially untreatable by conventional narcotics. Am I opposed to marijuana use? I don’t toke myself, but I thing that the war on drugs is a frightening failure–just like prohibition of alcohol had been–and I think that we should seriously consider legalizing pot. But, is Colorado’s unregulated “medical” experiment a horrible mistake? Absolutely.
There is no medical oversight of patients’ use (unlike, say, a prescription medicine, where you need to check in with your doctor, and which you receive from a trained pharmacist). There is no zoning in anti guv’ment places like the Springs (Pueblo, for example, is taking a cautious approach to zoning so that the problems my father is facing don’t occur). And now my father’s patients, with real problems, may have to reschedule their appointments, because one of the intruders bled over the floor, broke windows and furniture, and left a huge hole in the wall through which a lovely grassy aroma will be delivering contact highs.
Great.
Update: this poorly reasoned piece in the Gazette takes the opposite view. Unfortunately, the numbers don’t seem to support a ‘no correlation’ argument & the police say that there is insufficient data.