[Congressional Record Volume 163, Number 160 (Thursday, October 5, 2017)]
[House]
[Page H7883]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
{time} 1200
BREAST CANCER AWARENESS MONTH
(Mr. GAETZ asked and was given permission to address the House for 1
minute and to revise and extend his remarks.)
Mr. GAETZ. Mr. Speaker, it is Breast Cancer Awareness Month. Every
day, nearly 1,000 women in this country receive a life-changing
diagnosis that they will be affected by breast cancer. Nearly 200,000
of these diagnoses occur each year. One in eight women in our country
will face breast cancer.
Breast cancer has a devastating effect on our families, taking away
wives, mothers, aunts, uncles, sisters, and daughters.
I wish I was a brilliant scientist and could develop a cure. I wish I
was a magician and could wave a magic wand and cure breast cancer, but
I am just a Member of Congress. Actually, there are things this
Congress could do to make breast cancer less likely, less deadly, and
less painful.
Cannabis has shown promise in cancer research for over 2 decades.
This research finally came to fruition in 2007, when Dr. Sean
McAllister showed that cannabis-related compounds helped fight
malignant forms of breast cancer. In the decade since, other research
has confirmed and built on Dr. McAllister's findings, and there is now
conclusive research that shows that cannabis-related compounds have
antitumor properties.
Yet, despite these findings, scientists are going too slow. It is
time for cannabis research to begin, and we should declassify it as a
schedule I drug.
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