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- Peter McWilliams is dead.
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- Age? Fifty.
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- Profession? Author, poet, publisher.
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- Particular focus of interest? A federal judge in California
(George King) would decide in a few weeks how long a sentence to hand down,
and whether to send McWilliams to prison or let him serve his sentence
at home.
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- What was his offense? He collaborated in growing marijuana
plants.
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- What was his defense? Well, the judge wouldn't allow
him to plead his defense to the jury. If given a chance, the defense would
have argued that under Proposition 215, passed into California constitutional
law in 1996, infirm Californians who got medical relief from marijuana
were permitted to use it. The judge also forbade any mention that McWilliams
suffered from AIDS and cancer, and got relief from the marijuana.
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- What was he doing when he died? Vomiting. The vomiting
hit him while in his bathtub, and he choked to death. Was there nothing
he might have done to still the impulse to vomit? Yes, he could have taken
marijuana; but the judge's bail terms forbade him to do so, and he submitted
to weekly urine tests to confirm that he was living up to the terms of
his bail.
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- Did anybody take note of the risk he was undergoing?
He took Marinol -- a proffered, legal substitute, but reported after using
it that it worked for him only about one-third of the time. When it didn't
work, he vomited.
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- Was there no public protest against the judge's ruling?
Yes. On June 9, the television program 20/20 devoted a segment to the McWilliams
plight. Commentator John Stossel summarized: "McWilliams is out of
prison on the condition that he not smoke marijuana, but it was the marijuana
that kept him from vomiting up his medication. I can understand that the
federal drug police don't agree with what some states have decided to do
about medical marijuana, but does that give them the right to just end-run
those laws and lock people up?"
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- Shortly after the trial last year, Charles Levendosky,
writing in the Ventura County (Calif.) Star, summarized: "The cancer
treatment resulted in complete remission." But only the marijuana
gave him sustained relief from the vomiting that proved mortal.
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- Is it being said, in plain language, that the judge's
obstinacy resulted in killing McWilliams? Yes. A Libertarian Party press
release has made exactly that charge. "McWilliams was prohibited from
using medical marijuana -- and being denied access to the drug's anti-nausea
properties almost certainly caused his death."
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- Reflecting on the judge's
refusal to let the jury know that there was understandable reason for McWilliams
to believe he was acting legally, I ended a column in November by writing,
"So, the fate of Peter McWilliams is in the hands of Judge King. Perhaps
the cool thing for him to do is delay a ruling for a few months, and just
let Peter McWilliams die." Well, that happened on June 14.
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- The struggle against a fanatical imposition of federal
laws on marijuana will continue, as also on the question whether federal
laws can stifle state initiatives. Those who believe the marijuana laws
are insanely misdirected have a martyr.
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- Peter was a wry, mythogenic guy, humorous, affectionate,
articulate, shrewd, sassy. He courted anarchy at the moral level. His most
recent book (his final book) was called Ain't Nobody's Business If You
Do. We were old friends, and I owe my early conversion to word processing
to his guidebook on how to do it. Over the years we corresponded, and he
would amiably twit my conservative opinions.
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- When I judged him to have gone rampant on his own individualistic
views in his book, I wrote him to that effect. I cherish his reply -- nice
acerbic deference, the supreme put-down:
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- "Please remember the Law of Relativity as applied
to politics: In order for you to be right, at least someone else must be
wrong. Your rightness is only shown in relation to the other's wrongness.
Conversely, your rightness is necessary for people like me to look truly
wrong. Before Bach, people said of bad organ music, `That's not quite right.'
After Bach, people said flatly, `That's wrong.' This allowed dedicated
composers to grow, and cast the neophytes back to writing how-to-be-happy
music. So, thank me for my wrongness, as so many reviews of my book will
doubtless say, `People should read more of a truly great political commentator:
William F. Buckley Jr.' "
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- Imagine such a spirit ending its life at 50, just because
they wouldn't let him have a toke. We have to console ourselves with the
comment of the two prosecutors. They said they were "saddened"
by Peter McWilliams' death. Many of us are -- by his death...and by the
causes of it.
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- _____
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- William F. Buckley was a nationally syndicated columnist based in
New York.
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