Originally published via The Daily Bell:
Government agents got a tip that a Kansas man literally dying of terminal cancer was self-medicating with cannabis to ease his excruciating pain. They leapt into action to save the day and deliver justice to the criminal good and hard.
Via The Guardian:
“Hospital staff in Kansas called the police on a man dying of cancer who was using cannabis products to cope with his symptoms…
The encounter took place in mid-December, when police in the city of Hays say two officers showed up at the cancer patient’s hospital room to issue him a citation for a drug violation. Police also took away a vaping device and cannabis product that hospital staff had already confiscated….
Greg Bretz, the 69-year-old cancer patient… who has terminal, inoperable cancer, was issued a ‘must appear’ citation for drug possession.”
This is where extra-basic Karen-esque let-me-speak-to-the-manager “law and order” people chime in with their talking points.
“The law says dying cancer patients can’t seek relief from a plant with proven medicinal properties that existed for thousands of years before first commissioner of the Federal Bureau of Narcotics Henry Anslinger invented a series of fantastical lies about its psychological effects to get marijuana outlawed less than a century ago,” they’ll say, smug and assured of their own impeachable morality.
Actually, that would be giving them far too much credit. Most are totally ignorant of the roots of the American drug war.
The law provides criminal penalties, so criminal penalties are what the dying cancer patient gets, good and hard. And that’s called “justice.”
In the early 1960s, a Yale professor conducted a series of studies now known as the Milgram Shock Experiment(s) designed to measure the extent to which subjects (“teachers”) would obey orders from an authority figure to torture fellow humans (“learners”) simply for answer academic questions incorrectly.
Simply Psychology explains:
“Two rooms in the Yale Interaction Laboratory were used – one for the learner (with an electric chair) and another for the teacher and experimenter with an electric shock generator…
The ‘learner’ (Mr. Wallace) was strapped to a chair with electrodes. After he has learned a list of word pairs given him to learn, the “teacher’ tests him by naming a word and asking the learner to recall its partner/pair from a list of four possible choices.”
Each time the learner (who was in on the experiment) intentionally answered wrongly, the teacher was instructed to shock the learner with escalating voltages:
“There were 30 switches on the shock generator marked from 15 volts (slight shock) to 450 (danger – severe shock).
When the teacher refused to administer a shock, the experimenter was to give a series of orders/prods to ensure they continued.”
Whenever the teacher hesitated, the experimenter would make increasingly insistent demands to continue with the shocks:
“There were four prods and if one was not obeyed, then the experimenter (Mr. Williams) read out the next prod, and so on.
Prod 1: Please continue.
Prod 2: The experiment requires you to continue.
Prod 3: It is absolutely essential that you continue.
Prod 4: You have no other choice but to continue.”
And here were the results:
“65% (two-thirds) of participants (i.e., teachers) continued to the highest level of 450 volts. All the participants continued to 300 volts.
Milgram did more than one experiment – he carried out 18 variations of his study. All he did was alter the situation (IV) to see how this affected obedience (DV).”
That 65% is who the American cop is — machine men with machine hearts who can barely be called human. This is the creature who outsources his moral conscience (to the extent he had one in the first place) to the state and somehow can convince himself that his subservience is a virtue.
These cops either lack a conscience or the testicular fortitude to act on their conscience. More decent men would leave a dying human alone to whatever non-violent, victimless remedy he can find to take away the pain, if only temporarily.
They are either monsters or craven cowards, or both. Neither trait is admirable. What they did to this man is not “justice.” It’s state-sanctioned sadism.
If karma is real – and stories like this make one hope that it is — they’ll reap what they sow as they lay dying someday.
Ben Bartee is an independent Bangkok-based American journalist with opposable thumbs. Follow his stuff via Armageddon Prose and/or Substack, Patreon, Gab, and Twitter.
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As much a problem here is the hospital in the story. Their own cowardice and authoritarianism led to siccing the police on this guy in the first place.
When you're angry at the police for enforcing tyranny, never forget the problem begins with whoever is mobilizing the police against you in the first place.
the hospital is the worst place to be when you’re in pain. i could fill a book with just a few of my hospital horror stories. idk if it’s diff in other countries, but in the US it’s almost as if hospital staff torture ppl in pain on purpose--it’s psychopathic.