Peter McWilliams: Difference between revisions
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==Cause of Death: An Overdose Of Government== | ==Cause of Death: An Overdose Of Government== | ||
The [[Federal government]] has decided that smoking marijuana, even for medical purposes, is a [[victimless crime|crime]]. In [[1998]], McWilliams was arrested for violating the Federal marijuana law. | The [[Federal government]] has decided that smoking marijuana, even for medical purposes, is a [[victimless crime|crime]]. In [[1998]], McWilliams was arrested for violating the Federal marijuana law. The judge prohibited him from pointing-out that medical marijuana is legal in California, which was his only defence. | ||
No longer allowed to use marijuana, his pain and nausia returned, he once again couldn't keep his medicine down, and he subsequently died a couple weeks later on Wednesday, June 14, supposedly choking on his own vomit. | In [[2000]], he lost the case. No longer allowed to use marijuana, his pain and nausia returned, he once again couldn't keep his medicine down, and he subsequently died a couple weeks later on Wednesday, June 14, 2000, supposedly choking on his own vomit. | ||
==Quotes by Peter McWilliams== | ==Quotes by Peter McWilliams== |
Revision as of 13:26, 23 February 2006
Peter McWilliams (August 5, 1949 - June 14, 2000), was a world renown author of many books, a libertarian activist, and an advocate of full legalization of marijuana. He spoke at the 1998 Libertarian Party convention calling out to Libertarians to work for medicinal marijuana "for our children."
Ailments
In 1996 McWilliams was diagnosed with both cancer and AIDS. Subsequently, he was required to take a lot of pills--14 different medications. But like many cancer patients, Peter was unable to keep his pills down to stay alive due to intense nausea, thereby rendering the pills useless. His 15th drug, an antinausia medication, wasn't working. So, instead, he began taking marijuana. Again, like many cancer patients, he also found that smoking marijuana relieved the intense nausea and soothed the constant pain he was in, thus allowing him, not only to take his pills, but to also keep them down. Marijuana kept him alive.
Medicinal Marijuana Activism
Once Peter discovered that marijuana was the most "benign medical substance known to human beings," he decided to dedicate his life in the struggle to legalize medicinal marijuana throughout the country.
Cause of Death: An Overdose Of Government
The Federal government has decided that smoking marijuana, even for medical purposes, is a crime. In 1998, McWilliams was arrested for violating the Federal marijuana law. The judge prohibited him from pointing-out that medical marijuana is legal in California, which was his only defence.
In 2000, he lost the case. No longer allowed to use marijuana, his pain and nausia returned, he once again couldn't keep his medicine down, and he subsequently died a couple weeks later on Wednesday, June 14, 2000, supposedly choking on his own vomit.
Quotes by Peter McWilliams
- "Marijuana is the finest anti-nausea medication known to science." -- 1998 LP National Convention
- "Within seconds of the first toke, the nausea was gone, vanished with the smoke into the air." -- A Question of Compassion: An AIDS-Cancer Patient Explores Medical Marijuana
- "The Drug War is another Viet Nam." -- The DEA Wishes Me a Nice Day
- "In reality, serendipity accounts for one percent of the blessings we receive in life, work and love. The other 99 percent is due to our efforts."
- "To avoid situations in which you might make mistakes may be the biggest mistake of all." -- Life 101
Also See
External Links
- The Peter McWilliams Homepage
- The DEA Wishes Me a Nice Day by Peter McWilliams, circa 1997
- McWilliams is arrested for "trying to save lives" -- LP News September 1998
- Part One of A Question of Compassion: An AIDS-Cancer Patient Explores Medical Marijuana by Peter McWilliams
- Is Violence Justified? by Peter McWilliams, February 20, 1999
- Learning from Peter McWilliams by Harry Browne, 2000
- Peter McWilliams R.I.P. by William F. Buckley, Jr., July 17, 2000, National Review