Victims of the Prohibitionist Cartel: Kelsey with her abducted children. |
If 23-year-old Gooding, Idaho resident Kelsey Osborne is sent to prison for using medicinal cannabis to treat her daughter’s seizures, Governor Butch Otter should immediately grant her a pardon. If he fails to do so, he should be dragged into a public square in Boise and horsewhipped.
Madyson Osborne, Kelsey’s young daughter, has suffered from seizure-like
symptoms since she was 18 months old. Doctors prescribed Risperidone for the
child’s condition, despite its serious potential side effects. On October 4,
Madyson suffered an unusually severe fit that involved vomiting and disruptive
behavior her mother had not previously seen.
Desperate
to obtain relief for her child, and understandably concerned about the
cumulative effect of the dangerous antipsychotic drug she had been taking,
Kelsey made the girl a smoothie with marijuana butter – which immediately
calmed her down and helped her get to sleep. During a medical appointment the
following day, Madyson tested positive for marijuana. At this point, the doctor
– acting as an agent of the state, rather than a physician bound by Hippocratic
ethics to protect his patients – contacted the Idaho Department of Health and Welfare,
which seized Kelsey’s children.
The
mother now faces a charge of inflicting “injury on a child” by substituting a
healthy but officially banned treatment for a toxic pharmaceutical product that
has been approved by the state. Since this happened in Idaho, a felony drug
charge will almost certainly be imposed as well.
Last
year, acting on behalf of the pharmaceutical cartel, Idaho’s Republican
Governor Butch Otter vetoed a
measure
that would not have decriminalized
the use of medicinal marijuana but would
have allowed parents a positive legal defense of necessity if they are charged
with an offense for using medicinal cannabis to treat children suffering from
seizures. At the same time, Otter issued
an executive order allowing a tiny number of families to participate in an
officially sanctioned test project using a marijuana-derived product offered by
a government-licensed
pharmaceutical company. What this means, of course, is that providing medicinal
cannabis to a child is only a “crime” if this is done in a way that circumvents
state-approved gatekeepers.
If
Kelsey Osborne were able to use the defense offered by the bill Otter vetoed,
it’s profoundly doubtful that the Jerome County Prosecutor’s Office would
bother pursuing the case.
Owing
to the corrupt entente between the pharmaceutical cartel and the state’s
prohibitionist Pharisees, Idaho is burdened with anti-marijuana laws worthy of Saudi
Arabia.
The irony of this situation is lost on the full-time “creeping Sharia” alarmists
who canker the Gem State, the sort of people who are reliably deaf and blind to
most varieties of native-grown authoritarian sanctimony. Such people irrigate
their skivvies at the thought that somewhere in the state a woman might be
wearing a hijab as a gesture of religious commitment, but they aren’t unduly
troubled by the thought of children being abducted at gunpoint from a young
mother who faces prison for trying to wean her daughter from a foul
psychoactive drug that routinely wrecks both minds and bodies.
Six
years ago, Detroit resident Maryanne Godboldo – who, like Kelsey Osborne,
is a single mother -- held off an attempt by police and “child protection”
bureaucrats to abduct her teenage daughter, Ariana, so that she could be forcibly
drugged with Risperidone. Godboldo, a college dance instructor, had attempted
to school her daughter at home, but was eventually compelled by her financial
circumstances to place the youngster in a local government school. This meant
subjecting the already troubled child to the government-dictated suite of
vaccinations. Shortly after receiving the injections, the girl experienced
severe side-effects, including behavioral problems she hadn’t previously
experienced.
In
entirely predictable fashion, the government’s medical functionaries decided to
add one more noxious chemical to the cocktail by prescribing Risperidone as the
“remedy” for the damage caused by the injections. Within a few days, the victim
began to display suicidal impulses.
When the child snatchers came for her daughter, Maryanne — exercising the natural and plenary authority of a mother defending her child — denied them entrance to their home. Rather than obeying her lawful order to leave, the CPS contacted a SWAT team — complete with automatic weapons, armored personnel carriers, and helicopters — that laid siege to her home for ten hours.
Maryanne, who took up arms against the invaders, eventually surrendered and was charged with several felonies. All of those charges were dismissed a few months later when the Wayne County District Court ruled that the search of her home was illegal.
Seething with frustration over his thwarted desire to make an example of Godboldo, the DA tried to revive those charges in 2014. On July 12 of that year they were finally, and definitively, dismissed.
“In the end, it is a basic human right for parents to choose if they want to medicate their children,” observes Godboldo’s attorney, Allison Folmar. “When the state steps in and says `hey, mom and dad, we know what’s better for your child,’ that’s wrong.”
Victorious: Goldbodo (center) with friends. |
Significantly, an appeals court that heard Godboldo’s case acknowledged that citizens in “imminent danger” as a result of illegal police action have the right to use lethal force in protection of their homes. The true purpose of the right invoked in the Second Amendment, after all, is to protect one’s self and one’s family from the criminal violence of those who claim to rule us.
If
Idaho were the state it pretends to be, its residents would not permit its
government to punish Kelsey Osborne for choosing a safe and healthy treatment
regimen for her daughter’s seizures – and they would not allow Governor Otter
to escape accountability for the harm he has inflicted on that family, and many
others, in the service of the pharmaceutical-prohibitionist axis.
This essay has also been published at the newly inaugurated website of The Libertarian Institute -- which is where you will also find the archives of the weekly Freedom Zealot Podcast. Please check it out -- and tell your friends!
Dum spiro, pugno!