Summary: The Legalization Of Medical Marijuana

2431 Words5 Pages

The Legalization of Medical Marijuana

Jennifer Wright is a mother of three children who lives in Columbus, Ohio had three spinal surgeries (Ludlow, 2016). Jennifer struggled with the outcome of the surgeries that led her to have an addiction to painkillers and thought of suicide, so she could end the pain (Ludlow, 2016). Jennifer realized medical marijuana could help the pain she encountered (Ludlow, 2016). "'We're real people in real pain, ' she said. 'Do us justice.'" She wanted to have a pain free life to play with her three children (Ludlow, 2016). Table 1 shows the benefits of Minnesota patients with different types of illnesses. The table displays how 48% of patients showed great results from marijuana. From all the different types of diseases, they all show that the patients improve by 65%. Medical marijuana should be legal because it provides several benefits for those who are ill.
The History and …show more content…

For someone who has brain cancer like J.C, the sixteen-year-old boy, he and his mother wanted to do everything to get him better, even if it meant they would get in trouble by the government (Ludlow, 2016, para. 1). This situation is why states needs to legalize marijuana because people like J.C. can live a healthier, happier life. The federal government should have the responsibility to choose whether the Unites States should purchase and possess marijuana and not the states ("Marijuana Policy Project", 2015, para. 14). Even if states legalize marijuana, the federal government can "attack on patients, even in states with such laws," ("Marijuana Policy Project", 2015, para. 14). "Congress has the power and the responsibility to change federal law so that seriously ill people nationwide can use medical marijuana without fear of arrest and imprisonment," says the Marijuana Policy Project. Legalizing medical marijuana would give the everyone a chance to be

Open Document