An initiative called Operation Grow4Vets is "cultivating hope" by providing free marijuana to Colorado veterans. "Our bravest deserve access to the natural, safe medicine they choose," the Grow4Vets website states. The project operates its own grow centers and accepts donations from home and commercial cannabis growers.
Under Colorado's Amendment 64, which legalized recreational marijuana, giving away marijuana is legal.
In addition to providing marijuana directly to veterans, Grow4Vets also partners with manufacturers and farmers to teach veterans how to grow their own marijuana at home. And the group is establishing partnerships with local cannabusinesses to help veterans find employment as well.
After launching on Tuesday May 6, Grow4Vets saw more than 200 applications from veterans by Wednesday morning, according to CBS Denver. "True patriots support cannabis for heroes," Grow4Vets founder Roger Martin told CBS.
The Grow4Vets mission is both patriotic and rebellious. "Without [veterans'] sacrifice, we would not enjoy the peace and propriety at home that we often times take for granted," states the Grow4Vets website on a page titled "Why We Serve."
"As is too often the case in civilian medical care, the easiest answer for treating pain and emotional and mental conditions is pharmaceuticals. Most of these prescription medications are debilitating and many are extremely dangerous, highly-addictive narcotics. Far too many veterans feel that current treatment regimes are designed to keep them in a drug induced stupor for the rest of their lives….
Operation Grow4Vets/Facebook
Operation Grow4Vets believes that the Department of Defense and the Veterans Administration need to make a commitment to providing injured and wounded service members and veterans with non-life threatening forms of treatment. The use of medical cannabis is a rational alternative."
Grow4Vets founder Martin is a U.S. Army veteran who was prescribed Oxycontin in the 1970s for injuries he obtained in the Vietnam War. He was hospitalized twice before ultimately quitting the narcotic under treatment with another narcotic, Suboxone, and medical marijuana. He quickly ditched the Suboxone, and "now eats a marijuana infused cookie at night to reduce his pain to a level where he can now sleep 4-6 hours a night," according to Martin's bio.
"Anyone who would deny treatment with marijuana to a seriously or terminally ill person is either incredibly uniformed, or simply lacks any measure of compassion for his or her fellow human beings," Martin said.
Start your day with Reason. Get a daily brief of the most important stories and trends every weekday morning when you subscribe to Reason Roundup.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com
posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary
period.
Subscribe
here to preserve your ability to comment. Your
Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the
digital
edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do
not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments
do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and
ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
"Anyone who would deny treatment with marijuana to a seriously or terminally ill person is either incredibly uniformed, or simply lacks any measure of compassion for his or her fellow human beings," Martin said.
Is he just reading the required attributes for LEOs?
Don't you have to mention what you're spoiling though? If you say "spoiler alert" but don't say your spoiling Dr. Who or a the NHL playoffs, no one may ever read it. Likewise, no.one.would ever be able to.communicate anything if a single generic "trigger warning" we're required.
WHEN IN THE COURSE OF HUMAN EVENTS
*trigger warning*
Supporting the troops' not here, man.
Their veteran status just gives the judge something else to mandate not be discussed in court when they're being prosecuted by the feds.
"Anyone who would deny treatment with marijuana to a seriously or terminally ill person is either incredibly uniformed, or simply lacks any measure of compassion for his or her fellow human beings," Martin said.
Is he just reading the required attributes for LEOs?
Alt-text winner
I wish you'd given me a "trigger wanring" before I read this. I've had flashbacks to bad acid trips and the death of my brother, a vet, 21 years ago.
Meanies! You SHOULD HAVE KNOWN!
How the duck does a trigger warning not trigger the trigger, anyway? Anyone know.how that works? Or are there dog whistles code words that are used?
Yeah, I wonder this, too. But probably because I'm a white male, so rape culture racist paternalistic European-descent gender insensitive derp.
It's like a spoiler alert, I think.
Don't you have to mention what you're spoiling though? If you say "spoiler alert" but don't say your spoiling Dr. Who or a the NHL playoffs, no one may ever read it. Likewise, no.one.would ever be able to.communicate anything if a single generic "trigger warning" we're required.
WHEN IN THE COURSE OF HUMAN EVENTS
*trigger warning*
THE END
OMG I hate spell check for what.it did to my grammar above.
It's triggers all the way down.
"Our bravest deserve access to the natural, safe medicine they choose."
So why do veterans deserve this and not the rest of us?
Only heroes deserve to go home safe at the end of the shift. Civilians just lie there and take.it.
This is the kind of publicity we need.
If they VA won't look out for vets, well, somebody's got to do it.
"Our bravest deserve access to the natural, safe medicine they choose."
So why do veterans deserve this and not the rest of us?
Free marijuana?? What in the world! I wish I was there for this event, veterans don't get that now do they?