The Mexico of Washington State is at it again, now they handing out marijuana to retards 
What a disgusting, sex-obsessed and drug-obsessed state, giving drugs to everyone, including retard children! You know, they have to teach them young, to grow up to be a sex-crazy and drug abusing true Oregonian like the other ones.
From Englandish Daily Fail:
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/arti...ive-rages.html
What a disgusting, sex-obsessed and drug-obsessed state, giving drugs to everyone, including retard children! You know, they have to teach them young, to grow up to be a sex-crazy and drug abusing true Oregonian like the other ones.
From Englandish Daily Fail:
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/arti...ive-rages.html
Parents of autistic boy,11, give him medical marijuana to curb his self-destructive rages
The parents of a severely autistic boy have turned to medical marijuana in a last desperate bid to curb his self-destructive behaviour.
Eleven-year-old Alex Echols, from Portland, Oregon, would erupt into such violent rages he would headbutt walls until his entire face was black and blue.
His parents tried everything from buying him a protective helmet to mood-altering drugs.

From this: Autistic 11-year-old Alex Echols erupted into such violent rages he would do himself serious harm to the point where his parent took the heartbreaking decision to send him to a group care home

To this: But just an hour after using medical marijuana, his parents said Alex began playing with toys and acting calmly instead of hurting himself
But when all that failed, they took the heart-breaking decision to send him to a state-funded group home at the age of eight-years-old.
Feeling like they had 'thrown Alex away', the Echols later saw a news story on TV about a family that was using marijuana to treat their autistic son and they found a doctor to approve its use on Alex in the faint hope it might work.
After just a few months of treatment, his father said the improvement has been revolutionary.
'He went from yelling, screaming, bloodying his face, to within an hour, hour and a half, he would be playing with toys, using his hands,' Jeremy Echols told www.kptv.com.
'Something that at that time was almost unheard of.'

What a difference: His parents give Alex a liquid form of the drug about three times a week which is injected into his mouth from a syringe. Oregon law does not require a doctor to monitor a child's use of the drug
Alex suffers from the rare genetic disorder Tuberous Sclerosis, which causes non-malignant growths in organs and particularly the brain.
It affects around 50,000 people in the United States and leaves sufferers unable to communicate and displaying erratic behaviour.
Alex's group home will not administer the marijuana, so his parents give him a liquid form of the drug about three times a week which is injected into his mouth from a syringe.
Oregon law does not require a doctor to monitor a child's medical marijuana use and the dosage is up to the parents.
Alex is now one of 58 children currently protected under the Oregon Medical Marijuana Act.
Although autism is not a qualifying medical condition like cancer or severe pain, doctors ruled that his seizures made his eligible.
The parents of a severely autistic boy have turned to medical marijuana in a last desperate bid to curb his self-destructive behaviour.
Eleven-year-old Alex Echols, from Portland, Oregon, would erupt into such violent rages he would headbutt walls until his entire face was black and blue.
His parents tried everything from buying him a protective helmet to mood-altering drugs.

From this: Autistic 11-year-old Alex Echols erupted into such violent rages he would do himself serious harm to the point where his parent took the heartbreaking decision to send him to a group care home

To this: But just an hour after using medical marijuana, his parents said Alex began playing with toys and acting calmly instead of hurting himself
But when all that failed, they took the heart-breaking decision to send him to a state-funded group home at the age of eight-years-old.
Feeling like they had 'thrown Alex away', the Echols later saw a news story on TV about a family that was using marijuana to treat their autistic son and they found a doctor to approve its use on Alex in the faint hope it might work.
After just a few months of treatment, his father said the improvement has been revolutionary.
'He went from yelling, screaming, bloodying his face, to within an hour, hour and a half, he would be playing with toys, using his hands,' Jeremy Echols told www.kptv.com.
'Something that at that time was almost unheard of.'

What a difference: His parents give Alex a liquid form of the drug about three times a week which is injected into his mouth from a syringe. Oregon law does not require a doctor to monitor a child's use of the drug
Alex suffers from the rare genetic disorder Tuberous Sclerosis, which causes non-malignant growths in organs and particularly the brain.
It affects around 50,000 people in the United States and leaves sufferers unable to communicate and displaying erratic behaviour.
Alex's group home will not administer the marijuana, so his parents give him a liquid form of the drug about three times a week which is injected into his mouth from a syringe.
Oregon law does not require a doctor to monitor a child's medical marijuana use and the dosage is up to the parents.
Alex is now one of 58 children currently protected under the Oregon Medical Marijuana Act.
Although autism is not a qualifying medical condition like cancer or severe pain, doctors ruled that his seizures made his eligible.





Comment