joey: i haven t had a chance to talk about this yet and hope you ll allow me, there s fourth of july, celebration of freedom and marketed and then independence day and then celebration of the fight and war it took to gain the indianapolis dependence cpi hope the people independence and celebrate it. rachel: we kick it had off in the last hour and had a big fireworks display in wyoming and i was telling will, we were talking about safety with fireworks and i said it s really the dads that are really driving all of this stuff. will: there s a video of a family going around with a huge fireworks explosion in the front lawn and blows up the car and every year we talk about safety and no high horse to sit upon. throughout my life i ve been calf leer. joey cavalier. joey jones said fireworks make him incredibly nervous. if joey says that, we should have a little respect to fire works. joey: what we re going to talk about there s signs that people are putting in the yard and com
suicide in the netherlands. will: 220,000 died between 120 and 2021. rachel: we have dr. marc siegel here to react. this hits home for me and i have a daughter with down syndrome and this is frightening to me this is how society is treating them as a medical dr. what do you think about the medical community takerring a role in euthanasia? i m disturbed about it and you ll like this physician role and i ve been strong on this for years and my role is to decrease suffering and prolong life, not to end life, there s no reason whatsoever for me to do that because we ve seen in the united states that palliative care and hospice work. i can make people feel more comfortable who say they re suffering or who i decide who s so farring and this kingston
Updated: 3:04 PM CDT May 17, 2021 WVTM 13 Digital Alabama Governor Kay Ivey on Monday signed a medical marijuana bill into law, making it legal for registered patients with qualifying conditions to safely access and use medical cannabis. Alabama is the 37th state in the U.S. to legalize medical marijuana.More than a dozen conditions, including cancer, a terminal illness, depression, epilepsy, panic disorder and chronic pain would allow a person to qualify.Ivey released this statement after signing Senate Bill 46:“Signing SB 46 is an important first step. I would like to again thank Sen. Tim Melson and Rep. Mike Ball for their hard work over the last few years and their willingness to address the legitimate concerns. This is certainly a sensitive and emotional issue and something that is continually being studied. On the state level, we have had a study group that has looked closely at this issue, and I am interested in the potential good medical cannabis ca
Alabama Governor Kay Ivey is still reviewing a medical marijuana bill that would allow registered patients with qualifying conditions to safely access and use medical cannabis.