Tw3nti3ight
Well-Known Member
If someone wants to pick me up I am down...what days? 19 would work...I am off 55 on the way to springfield...
http://www.typepad.com/services/trackback/6a00d834515c5469e20133f606ef82970b
this is the first article i've seen about the recent actions in the house... Basically says that the effective date had to be changed in order for the bill to not become effective immediately. If no change was made it would have required 71 votes, with the new wording the bill would require only a simple majority to pass. This is good news, but carries the extra step of having to go back to the senate for a re-vote before moving to the governor. The bill is on the 3rd reading which means, upon its next proposal (i guess maybe this is that 1/11/2011 date), it will come to vote--passing will send back to senate or fails and bill is dead. Article by says lou lang appeared to have enough votes to pass the bill through the house... Also talks crazy nonsense "illinois could be the first state in the midwest to legalize marijuana and open the door to increased usage among the state's youth." what the hell is that!?!?! I guess that's their only defense this conservative blog has against this legislation.
Really hope so!![]()
Just remember, this is a bill for PATIENTS! If this is widely abused the program will not be renewed after the 3 year expiration. This is NOT one of those "let's get this passed so we can ALL enjoy cannabis" bills, this is for the benefit of patients.
This should be voted on the 29th or 30th, if you want to witness history and make one last effort to help get this passed, make it to Springfield on those days. It will have to jump back through the Senate because of the date change in the bill,but it should be swiftly ok'd the following day. So, if this is going to pass it sounds like we aren't going to have to wait until January!
So basically what are the chances if this passes that my mother and I will be able to get a card? She was diagnosed with severe anxiety and takes meds that are not cheap. She is also on meds for high blood pressure (related to the anxiety). I on the other hand don't take medications, but I suffer from severe depression and anxiety as well. Smoking now really helps me relax and takes the huge boulder off my shoulder that i unfortunately have to live with the rest of my life. I refuse to take anti-depressants because those just do other damage to your body. I would really hate to see people like myself getting denied just because our conditions aren't a "debilitating medical condition".
So basically what are the chances if this passes that my mother and I will be able to get a card? She was diagnosed with severe anxiety and takes meds that are not cheap. She is also on meds for high blood pressure (related to the anxiety). I on the other hand don't take medications, but I suffer from severe depression and anxiety as well. Smoking now really helps me relax and takes the huge boulder off my shoulder that i unfortunately have to live with the rest of my life. I refuse to take anti-depressants because those just do other damage to your body. I would really hate to see people like myself getting denied just because our conditions aren't a "debilitating medical condition".
I'm sorry to say that, at this time, I doubt that your mother will be eligible....maybe in the future, only time will demonstrate how open doctors are to the idea of defining certain conditions as debilitating. You DEFINITELY won't be eligible, as the bill states that you must have first tried other medications, this bill does not automatically allow a patient to bypass other avenues of medication and default to cannabis.
Look guys and gals, this bill represents the first stepping stone in the right direction. Doctors will be very reluctant to prescribe marijuana for anthing at first. You have to realize this is going to take time. Doctors will have to understand its effects and get used to prescribing marijuana. It will get there but for the first year dont expect to get a script for anxiety or anthing other than cancer patients going through chemo.
Dude wake up!!! You are lost...you are telling me that Illinois doctors are dumber than Californians? Like they don't know others that are in the same field in another state. And they don't converse or read articles....W O W! Especially with how technologically advanced we "think" we are...
I find that HARD to believe...View attachment 1294505
What? Without being the person who approves or denies, how are you going to say he won't be eligible? I don't see anywhere in the bill that says a person has to of pursued other avenues of medication.
SB1381 said:a debilitating disease or medical condition or its treatment that produces intractable pain, which is severe, debilitating pain that did not respond to other reasonable medical efforts for a reasonable period of time, including in cases where other treatment options produced serious side effects;
Wait, so if I were on a cocktail of antidepressants, stopped taking them because they were effectively turning me into a brainless zombie, MMJ would be an option here in Illinois?
Dude wake up!!! You are lost...you are telling me that Illinois doctors are dumber than Californians? Like they don't know others that are in the same field in another state. And they don't converse or read articles....W O W! Especially with how technologically advanced we "think" we are...
I find that HARD to believe...![]()
Dude wake up!!! You are lost...you are telling me that Illinois doctors are dumber than Californians? Like they don't know others that are in the same field in another state. And they don't converse or read articles....W O W! Especially with how technologically advanced we "think" we are...
I find that HARD to believe...View attachment 1294505
A lot of good stuff in this thread. None of it matters though. The bill has been defeated.