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February 17, 2008

WI State Journal columnist asks Bill Clinton, "Where's Jacki's Medicine?"

Posted by Gary Storck
Sunday, February 17, 2008

While standing in the cold on Valentine's Day, holding our "Where's Jacki's Medicine?" signs outside the UW-Madison Stock Pavilion, we were approached by WI State Journal columnist Susan Lampert Smith, heading in to see Bill Clinton.

We chatted a bit and explained why we there. I gave her a card with Jacki's number. While she did not get around to contacting Jacki, she included Jacki's story in this article.

I’m glad Bill Clinton’s mistreatment of Jacki made news.

Time passing by Clinton generation

Susan Lampert Smith
February 17, 2008
Read original article: here.

The cute girl in the YouTube video has a crush on Obama.

I know how she feels. I 've had a crush on Bill Clinton.

I already know all the reasons why this is stupid.

In fact, I saw one of those reasons standing in line, waiting to get into the Stock Pavilion on the UW-Madison campus.

It was one of our former interns at the newspaper. She 's young and beautiful and smart. And I know how the old cad is with those young interns. So I jumped in line to protect her.

Sitting there, in the old barn still redolent with the hay and animals that star in Stock Pavilion events, we scanned the crowd as we waited.

Who got to sit in those reserved seats behind Clinton? They were the political version of the cool kid table in the high school lunchroom. She recognized UW-Madison student and superdelegate Awais Khaleel. As the rest filed in, I filled her in.

That 's Joe Wineke, he used be a state senator, now he 's head of the Democratic Party. The bald guy? Tom Loftus, he used to be ambassador to Norway.

The woman firing up the crowd? Hannah Rosenthal, she used to be and that 's her husband, Rick Phelps, he once was And then it hit me. I was talking about a time when she was in grade school.

Finally, Clinton took the stage. I nudged her.

He 's cute, isn 't he?

She was diplomatic: He 's a very nice-looking older man.

Sigh. Clinton didn 't seem bothered by the fact that Barack Obama outdrew him nearly 10-to-1 at the jam-packed Kohl Center two days before.

Clinton delivered his valentine to Hillary, telling the students that his wife started changing the world back when she was their age and a Yale law student. He talked about how America 's status had gone to the dogs since he left office.

He talked and he talked, for over an hour.

By contrast, the Obama event had been quick-boom-bang. There was the cool celebrity video by the Black Eyed Peas on the big screen, a quick introduction by Gov. Jim Doyle, and a trademark Obama speech, short on details, long on inspiration.

He talked about the young crowd, not to them: It 's your time, seize the moment.

Remember 1992, when the Clintons were the cool young people?

Back when they played Fleetwood Mac 's "Don 't Stop " and other songs of our generation.

Out on the sidewalk was someone else who remembered.

It was another graying Madison icon, marijuana activist Ben Masel, who was sandwiched by Secret Service guys in their sharp suits. Masel was holding up a sign that said, "Where 's Jacki 's medicine? "

The way Masel tells it, Jacki Rickert, who suffers from a painful connective tissue disorder, met Clinton on his 1992 bus trip through Wisconsin, and asked him to legalize marijuana for medical use. Clinton told her, in his husky drawl, I feel your pain.

But when he got into office, the president who didn 't inhale didn 't legalize medical marijuana. Jacki didn 't get her medicine. The rest of us who voted for him didn 't get our health-care reform.

How will the future play out for today 's Obama girls?

I do know this: After two hours on the cold concrete steps of the Stock Pavilion, I felt my own pain.

Where 's my medicine?

It's interesting to note the article mentions former Dane County Exec Rick Phelps and his wife Hannah Rosenthal. In 1998, Rick Phelps was running in the primary against Tammy Baldwin, for the Second District congressional seat vacated by Republican Scott Klug. In the summer of 1998, I approached their table at the Farmer’s Market on a couple occasions and discussed medical cannabis with each. Phelps was very supportive but, Rosenthal, then the deputy secretary of HHS in Chicago, went even further, volunteering that cannabis had helped comfort a once ailing, by then deceased, family member in their battle with cancer. Meanwhile, her boss at the time, HHS Secretary Donna Shalala, had vehemently flipped against medical cannabis once being tapped by the Clintons in 1992, and became a leading public opponent.


Watch Hillary Clinton dancing around the topic of Medical Cannabis


Posted by Gary at February 17, 2008 09:35 AM

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