Cannabis
The future
of medicine
Stes de Necker
The future of medicine rests on the
fundamental right we all have to use things that spring from the Earth
naturally as healing agents. Why should cannabis, used for at least 10000 years
by humankind to alleviate suffering, be excluded from this inexorable mandate?
The politics of cannabis are exceedingly
complex, and yet the truth is simple: this freely growing plant heals the human
body – not to mention provides food, fuel, clothing and shelter, if only we
will let it perform its birthright.
The
human body is in many ways pre-designed, or as it were, pre-loaded with a
receptiveness to cannabis’ active compounds — cannabinoids — thanks to its well documented endocannabinoid system. And yet, the
medical-industrial complex in the U.S. does not want you to use these freely
growing compounds – they threaten its very business model and existence.
This is why cannabis prohibition synergizes
so naturally with the burgeoning privatized prison sector in the U.S., which
now has the dubious title of having the highest incarceration rate in the world.
For every 100,000 Americans, 743 citizens sit
behind bars. Presently, the prison population in America consists of more than
six million people, a number exceeding the amount of prisoners held in the gulags of the former Soviet
Union at any point in its history.” According to a recent Al-Jeezera editorial, “One explanation for the boom in the
prison population is the mandatory sentencing imposed for drug offences and the
“tough on crime” attitude that has prevailed since the 1980s”.
Cannabis/marijuana is presently on the DEA’s
Schedule 1 list. Since 1972, cannabis has been listed on the Schedule I of the
Controlled Substances Act, the most tightly restricted category reserved for
drugs which have “no currently accepted medical use”.
Opioids, stimulants, psychedelics and a few
antidepressants now populate this list of substances that can put you in jail
for possessing without a prescription.
The
notion that marijuana has no ‘medicinal benefits’ is preposterous, actually.
Since time immemorial it has been used as a
panacea (‘cure-all’). In fact, as far back as 2727 B.C., cannabis was recorded
in the Chinese pharmacopoeia as an effective medicine, and evidence for its use
as a food, textile and presumably as a healing agent stretch back even further,
to 12 BC.
When it comes to cannabis’ medical
applications, cannabis’ ‘healing properties’ is a loaded term.
In fact, it is extremely dangerous, as far as
the medical industrial complex goes, who has the FDA/FTC to enforce it’s
mandate: anything that prevents, diagnoses, treats or cures a disease must be
an FDA approved drug by law, i.e. pharmaceutical agents which often have 75 or
more adverse effects for each marketed and approved “therapeutic” effect.
Indeed, the dominant, drug-based medical system does not even acknowledge the
body’s healing abilities, opting for a view that looks at most bodily suffering
as fatalistic, primarily genetically based, and resulting from dysfunction in
the mechanical design of a highly entropic ‘bag of enzymes and proteins’
destined to suffer along the trajectory of time.
Accordingly. A
two trillion dollar a year industry stands between you
and access to the disease alleviating properties of this humble plant.
As Emerson said, “a weed is an herb whose
virtues have yet to be discovered,” and yet, by this definition, cannabis is
not a weed, but given that is has been extensively researched and used for
thousands of years for a wide range of health conditions, it should be
considered and respected as a medicinal herb and food.
Sadly, the fact that the whole herb is
non-patentable is the main reason why it is still struggling to gain approval
from the powers that be.
Let’s look at the actual, vetted, published
and peer-reviewed research – bullet proof, if we are to subscribe to the
‘evidence-based’ model of medicine – which includes over 100 proven
therapeutic actions of this amazing plant, featuring the following:
Multiple Sclerosis
Tourette Syndrome
Pain
Obsessive Compulsive Disorder
Brachial Plexus Neuropathies
Insomnia
Multiple Splasticity
Memory Disorders
Social Anxiety Disorders
Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis
Inflammatory Bowel Disease
Cancer
Opiate Addiction
Anorexia
Bladder Dysfunction
Bronchial Asthma
Chemotherapy-induced Harm
Constipation
Crack Addiction
Dementia
Fibromyalgia
Glaucoma
Heroin Addiction
Lymphoma
Nausea
Neuropathy
Obesity
Phantom Limb
Spinal Cord Injuries
Endotoxemia
Myocardia Infarction (Heart Attack)
Oxidative Stress
Diabetes: Cataract
Tremor
Cardiac Arrhythmias
Fatigue
Fulminant Liver Failure
Low Immune Function
Aging
Alcohol Toxicity
Allodynia
Arthritis: Rheumatoid
Ascites
Atherosclerosis
Diabetes Type 1
High Cholesterol
Liver Damage
Menopausal Syndrome
Morphine Dependence
Appetite Disorders
Auditory Disease
Dystonia
Epstein-Barr infections
Gynecomasia
Hepatitis
Intestinal permeability
Leukemia
Liver Fibrosis
Migraine Disorders
Oncoviruses
Psoriasis
Thymoma
Moreover,
this plant’s therapeutic properties have been subdivided into the following 40+
pharmacological actions:
Analgesic (Pain Killing)
Neuroprotective
Antispasmodic
Anxiolytic
Tumor necrosis factor inhibitor
Anti-inflammatory
Antiproliferative
Apoptotic
Chempreventive
Antidepressive
Antiemetic
Bronchodilator
Anti-metastatic
Anti-neoplastic
Antioxidant
Cardioprotective
Hepatoprotective
Anti-tumor
Enzyme inhibitor
Immunomodulatory
Anti-angiogenic
Autophagy up-regulation
Acetylocholinesterase inhibitor
Anti-platelet
Calcium channel blocker
Cell cycle arrest
Cylooxygenase inhibitor
Glycine agents
Immunomodulatory: T-Cell down-regulation
Intracellular adhesion molecule-1 inducer
Matrix mettaproteinase-1 inhibitor
Neuritohgenic
Platelet Aggregration Inhibito
Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor A
inhibitor
Anti-apoptotic
Anti-proliferative
Anti-psychotic
Antiviral
Caspase-3 activation
Chemosensitizer
Immunosupressive agent
Interleukin-6 upregulation
Tumor suppressor protein p53 upregulation
Thanks to modern scientific investigation, it
is no longer considered strictly ‘theoretical’ that cannabis has a role to play
in medicine. There is a growing movement to wrench back control from the powers
that be, whose primary objectives appear to be the subjection of the human body
in order to control the population (political motives) — what 20th century
French philosopher Michel Foucault termed biopower — and not to awaken true
healing powers intrinsic within the body of all self-possessed members of
society.
Even the instinct towards recreational use –
think of the etymology: to re-create – should be allowed, as long as
those who choose to use cannabis instead of tobacco and alcohol (and
prescription drugs) do not cause harm to themselves or others.
How many deaths are attributed to cannabis
each year versus these other societally approved recreational agents? Not to
mention prescription drugs, which are the 3rd leading cause of death in the
developed world?
And understanding the healing benefits of
cannabis, how many deaths can be attributed to cannabis prohibition each
year?
I think people need to be educated to the
fact that marijuana is not a drug. Marijuana is an herb and a flower. God put
it here. If He put it here and He wants it to grow, what gives the government
the right to say that God is wrong? ~ Willie Nelson
Ultimately, the politics surrounding cannabis
access and the truth about its medicinal properties are so heavily a
politicized issue that it is doubtful the science itself will prevail against
the distorted lens of media characterizations of it as a ‘dangerous drug’, and
certainly not the iron-clad impasse represented by federal laws against its
possession and use.
All we can do is to advocate for the
fundamental rights we all possess as free men and women, and our inborn right
towards self-possession, i.e as long as what we do does not interfere with the
choices and rights of others, we should be free to use an herb/food/textile
that sprouts freely and grows freely from this earth, as God/Nature as freely
made available.
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