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  • Richard Lake

    Richard Lake 10:21 am on April 8, 2011 Permalink  

    Letter Of The Week 

    LEGALIZE MARIJUANA AND BE DONE WITH IT

    So the new legislation “that would allow those caught with small
    amounts of marijuana to avoid punishment altogether if they can
    convince a judge that they used the drug out of medical necessity” is
    supposed to be a “middle ground on marijuana?” Get real. This is yet
    another excuse to put off what should have been done long ago:
    legalization, not just for medicinal use, but for all citizens.

    The fact of the matter is that marijuana is safer than alcohol or
    tobacco, yet its use can cause one to lose their job, be expelled from
    schools and universities, and even land in jail. We spend an enormous
    amount of money to enforce marijuana laws, as evidenced by the 759,593
    arrests for possession alone in 2009. That translates to huge sums of
    money spent on unnecessary law enforcement and a prison population
    filled with people who are hardly criminals (and are forced to survive
    in a system that only creates more criminals). Regulation would also
    bring in a new source of tax revenue, as well as taking a huge cash
    crop away from drug cartels that terrorize Mexico and other parts of
    the world.

    So please, don’t insult our intelligence by telling us that the
    proposed legislation is a “middle ground.” We shouldn’t even have to
    establish a middle ground. The support for legalization is based in
    fact, while its opponents have long used fear and lies at a great cost
    to our society.

    Joel Beller, Owings Mills

    Pubdate: Wed, 30 Mar 2011

    Source: Baltimore Sun (MD)

     
  • Richard Lake

    Richard Lake 5:08 am on April 3, 2011 Permalink  

    ALERT: #467 Michigan Marihuana Act Under Attack 

    MICHIGAN MARIHUANA ACT UNDER ATTACK

    **********************************************************************

    DrugSense FOCUS Alert #467 – Sunday, April 3rd, 2011

    More than 1.3 million adults read the Sunday Detroit Free Press so
    what it prints is influential.

    Today two items focused on medicinal marijuana.

    The first, an in depth editorial, is at

    http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v11/n218/a09.html

    The second, a detailed article, is at

    http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v11.n219.a01.html

    Please consider writing LTEs to the Michigan newspapers shown here

    http://www.drugsense.org/cms/geoview/n-us-mi

    To follow press clippings about Michigan cannabis use this link

    http://www.mapinc.org/find?275

    And please send this Alert to others who may be interested. You may
    also send it as a link to this Alert from the DrugSense Blog

    http://drugsense.org/blog/category/wycd/alerts

    It Is Not What Others Do, It Is What You Do.

    **********************************************************************

    Prepared by: Richard Lake, Focus Alert Specialist http://www.mapinc.org

    ===
    .
    DrugSense provides many services at no charge, but they are not
    free to produce. Your contributions make DrugSense and its Media
    Awareness Project (MAP) happen. Please donate today. Our secure Web
    server at http://www.drugsense.org/donate.htm accepts credit cards
    and Paypal. Or, mail your check or money order to:
    .
    DrugSense
    14252 Culver Drive #328
    Irvine, CA 92604-0326.
    (800) 266 5759
    .
    DrugSense is a 501c(3) non-profit organization dedicated to raising
    awareness about the expensive, ineffective, and destructive “War on
    Drugs.” Donations are tax deductible to the extent provided by law.

     
  • Richard Lake

    Richard Lake 12:46 pm on April 1, 2011 Permalink  

    Letter Of The Week 

    DESPITE MARIJUANA, BRECKENRIDGE IS PLENTY SAFE

    Re. “Potheads ruining Breckenridge” by Lorie Willis, letters, March 21
    I would like to thank Lorie Willis of San Antonio, Texas for her
    pleasant description of Breckenridge. It is beautiful, and we do love
    it here. I am concerned about a few points in her letter and would
    like to share my opinion and some statistics with everyone.

    Firstly it was said that Breckenridge is now unsafe due to marijuana
    legalization. I went to http://www.neighborhoodscout.com to check the
    statistics. Breckenridge scored a 74 out of 100 for safety with only
    .64 violent crimes per year per 1,000 residents; where as a place like
    San Antonio, Texas scored a 4 out of 100 for safety with 6.87 violent
    crimes per 1,000 residents annually. Clearly Breckenridge is safer
    than not only San Antonio but 74 percent of all cities nationwide!

    Breckenridge residents voted over 70 percent in favor of legalizing
    marijuana, up from over 60 percent in 2006 when asked at the state
    level. Breckenridge residents have been consuming cannabis in high
    numbers since the late 70s, and its their charm and stewardship of
    this great land that attracted people like myself and Lorie to visit
    and live. I would argue we shouldn’t let a misconception about our
    cannabis use lead any of us away from the town of Breckenridge.

    Support for legalization grows daily not only in Breck and Summit
    County but in the nation and the world. As cannabis consumption rises
    and alcohol abuse drops Breckenridge will only become safer and more
    family friendly. As always stay classy, Breckenridge

    Brian Rogers

    Pubdate: Wed, 23 Mar 2011

    Source: Summit Daily News (CO)

    Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v11/n000/a014.html

     
  • Richard Lake

    Richard Lake 10:44 pm on March 25, 2011 Permalink  

    Letter Of The Week 

    STOP PUTTING GARDENERS BEHIND BARS

    It looks like the taxpayers of Illinois are going to be paying for
    the room and board of another felony gardener. ( “Area drug agents
    seize cannabis plants, suspect still at large” 3-10-11 ).

    Have your local police solved all of your rapes, robberies and
    murders? If not, why are they going after gardeners?

    If you would regulate, control and tax cannabis, the state of
    Illinois could make money off it instead of giving free housing to
    non-violent gardeners.

    Kirk Muse

    Mesa, Ariz.

    Pubdate: Mon, 14 Mar 2011

    Source: Journal Standard, The (Freeport, IL)

    Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v11/n000/a013.html

     
  • Richard Lake

    Richard Lake 9:27 am on March 18, 2011 Permalink  

    Letter Of The Week 

    CRIMINAL PROHIBITION MAKES CANNABIS WORTH FIGHTING FOR

    In attempting to blame cannabis consumers for black market violence
    (“Violence follows industry, cops warn,” March 9), RCMP Cpl. Peter
    DeVries came tantalizingly close to understanding the problem.

    DeVries remarked “because of its monetary value as a commodity,
    marijuana is inextricably tied to serious acts of violence.”

    Indeed, criminal prohibition makes the “street value” of cannabis
    worth fighting for. Additionally, black marketeers have no recourse
    to the law, and must settle their own disputes. Starbucks employees
    are not found left for dead by Tim Hortons employees.

    We do not know what percentage of cannabis cultivators and merchants
    are violent criminals, because the market is unregulated, but a
    survey of Canadian prisoners serving time for high-level cultivation
    and trafficking found that about 70 per cent were otherwise law-abiding.

    Just as alcohol consumers supported Al Capone, and cocaine consumers
    supported Pablo Escobar, if you buy cannabis (rather than grow your
    own) and you do not know its origins, then you might be supporting
    violent criminals. If you still support cannabis prohibition, then
    you most certainly are.

    Matthew Elrod

    Victoria

    Pubdate: Fri, 11 Mar 2011

    Source: Province, The (CN BC)

    Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v11/n160/a10.html

    Source: Province, The (CN BC)

     
  • Richard Lake

    Richard Lake 12:14 pm on March 11, 2011 Permalink  

    Letter Of The Week 

    DRUGS WON THE WAR

    Re: Canada’s illicit drug trade growing, March 3.

    So if I read this article correctly, all the billions of dollars
    spent on the “war on drugs” in the United States and Canada has
    resulted in a growth in the trade.

    The International Narcotics Control Board (INCB) spokesperson then
    goes on to say what a “professional” job the RCMP and the Canadian
    government have done in combating drug trafficking.

    This raises a couple of questions: are illicit drugs harder to find
    than they were 30 years ago when the “war on drugs” started? No. Has
    scarcity even made the price go up? Again no.

    So, in other words, prohibition has completely failed and, in fact,
    has caused a great deal of harm by criminalizing a large segment of
    the population for use of a relatively harmless herb (marijuana).

    Compare this to the approach toward cigarettes, a legal product
    guaranteed to kill 50 per cent of its consumers.

    Tobacco is taxed quite heavily. Those taxes pay for education and
    smoking cessation programs. And smoking rates have declined
    substantially over the same 30-year period.

    So, you would think that, if your real goal was to reduce illicit
    drug use, the “professional” approach would be to admit that
    prohibition has failed and try legalization, regulation, taxation,
    and education. Of course, that might threaten those “drug and related
    budgets” which the INCB insist must be maintained. If they actually
    solved the problem, a whole lot of “enforcers” would need new jobs.

    Scott Kelland

    Merrickville

    Pubdate: Sat, 5 Mar 2011

    Source: Ottawa Citizen (CN ON)

    Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v11/n147/a07.html

     
  • Richard Lake

    Richard Lake 8:46 am on March 10, 2011 Permalink  

    ALERT: #466 Will Michigan’s Local Reform Laws Be Repealed? 

    WILL MICHIGAN’S LOCAL REFORM LAWS BE REPEALED?

    **********************************************************************

    DrugSense FOCUS Alert #466 – Thursday, March 10th, 2011

    In the months ahead the following local Michigan laws could be repealed:

    Ferndale Medical Marijuana Ordinance http://www.drugsense.org/cms/node/49

    Flint Code Amendment-Medical Marihuana http://www.drugsense.org/cms/node/42

    Traverse City Medical Marijuana Ordinance http://www.drugsense.org/cms/node/50

    Ann Arbor Medical Marijuana Ordinance http://www.drugsense.org/cms/node/52

    Plus Detroit’s needle exchange and medicinal marijuana laws as well
    as other progressive drug policy reform laws in other cities.

    Please read Michigan House Bills 4216, 4217, and 4218 at

    http://www.legislature.mi.gov/

    If these bills become law all that is needed is for the Michigan
    executive branch to make “a finding of probable financial stress” for
    any local government unit within the state. The very large majority
    are now suffering financial stress. Once the finding is made an
    “emergency manager” appointed by the executive branch takes over
    that government and has unbelievable powers to change anything that
    may have a financial impact. Thus if our reform laws have a
    financial impact in one person’s opinion they can be struck down.

    We were alerted to this possibility by folks who watched these two TV
    shows – http://drugsense.org/url/wXxPawCG and http://drugsense.org/url/gz0evdaG

    What can you do? If you live close enough you could join the tens of
    thousands protesting this power grab at the state capitol.

    Plus consider writing LTEs to the Michigan newspapers shown here

    http://www.drugsense.org/cms/geoview/n-us-mi

    And please send this Alert to others who may be interested. You may
    also send it as a link to this Alert from the DrugSense Blog

    http://drugsense.org/blog/category/wycd/alerts

    It is not what others do, it is what you do.

    **********************************************************************

    Prepared by: Richard Lake, Focus Alert Specialist http://www.mapinc.org

    ===
    .
    DrugSense provides many services at no charge, but they are not
    free to produce. Your contributions make DrugSense and its Media
    Awareness Project (MAP) happen. Please donate today. Our secure Web
    server at http://www.drugsense.org/donate.htm accepts credit cards
    and Paypal. Or, mail your check or money order to:
    .
    DrugSense
    14252 Culver Drive #328
    Irvine, CA 92604-0326.
    (800) 266 5759
    .
    DrugSense is a 501c(3) non-profit organization dedicated to raising
    awareness about the expensive, ineffective, and destructive “War on
    Drugs.” Donations are tax deductible to the extent provided by law.
    .
    Unsubscribe: http://drugsense.org/unsub.htm

     
  • Richard Lake

    Richard Lake 5:23 am on March 7, 2011 Permalink  

    Letter Writer of the Month – February – Chris Buors 

    DrugSense recognizes Chris Buors of Winnipeg, Manitoba for his letter
    published during February bring his total published letters that we
    know of to 239.

    You may review his published letters at:

    http://www.mapinc.org/writers/Chris+Buors

     
  • Richard Lake

    Richard Lake 8:14 am on March 4, 2011 Permalink  

    Letter Of The Week 

    BILL COULD LEGALIZE, REGULATE MARIJUANA USE

    A Solid and Sensible Case for Legalization

    Thank you for making such a solid and sensible case for the
    legalization and regulation of marijuana ["Legalize marijuana,"
    Opinion, Feb. 20].

    As Seattle’s police chief for six years, and as a law-enforcement
    officer for nearly three decades before that, I saw more than enough
    on the front lines of the drug war to convince me that it’s time to
    end marijuana prohibition.

    In addition to powerful economic and civil-rights arguments,
    marijuana legalization will allow law enforcement to focus on
    preventing and solving crimes against persons and property.
    Legalization will eliminate a huge, untaxed revenue source for gangs
    and cartels whose members never hesitate to use violence against each
    other, the police and innocent citizens in order to protect their
    illicit profits.

    Our state’s lawmakers have an opportunity to do the right thing
    locally while also taking a powerful leadership role in the national
    movement to end marijuana prohibition. For doubters and proponents
    alike, The Times’ editorial should be required reading.

    Norm Stamper, Eastsound

    Pubdate: Wed, 23 Feb 2011

    Source: Seattle Times (WA)

    Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v11/n000/a010.html

     
  • Richard Lake

    Richard Lake 6:31 pm on February 26, 2011 Permalink  

    ALERT: #465 Will New Mexico Repeal Its Medical Marijuana Law? 

    WILL NEW MEXICO REPEAL ITS MEDICAL MARIJUANA LAW?

    **********************************************************************

    DrugSense FOCUS Alert #465 – Saturday, February 26th, 2011

    It seems more likely than not that the New Mexico Legislature
    http://www.nmlegis.gov/lcs/ will repeal the state’s medical marijuana law.

    New Mexico became the 12th state in the country to allow legal access
    to medical cannabis. The bill, the Lynn and Erin Compassionate Use
    Act, passed the New Mexico State Legislature and was signed into law
    in the spring of 2007.

    News clippings about this effort to repeal the law will be found at

    http://www.mapinc.org/states/NM/

    If the law is repealed it will encourage similar efforts in other
    medical marijuana states.

    Please do whatever you can to help stop this effort. Tell your
    friends. Forward this alert or send links to it. Support
    organizations opposing the repeal effort.

    Below is an Associated Press wire authored by Sue Major Holmes which
    provides details.

    Please note that the alert “Will Montana Repeal Its Medical Marijuana
    Law?” is still valid as there has been no final decision by their
    legislature. http://www.mapinc.org/alert/0464.html

    Verified facts about medicinal cannabis are found at

    http://www.drugwarfacts.org/cms/node/54

    **********************************************************************

    MEDICAL MARIJUANA REPEAL POSSIBILITY

    NM Lawmaker Wants to Repeal Medical Marijuana

    ALBUQUERQUE (AP) – A freshman New Mexico lawmaker who’s a high school
    teacher in civilian life is trying to repeal the state’s medical marijuana law.

    The law “sends a bad message to kids, that somehow marijuana is good
    for you,” said Republican Rep. Jim Smith of Sandia Park, who teaches
    at East Mountain Charter High School east of Albuquerque.

    Gov. Susana Martinez said during her campaign last year the state’s
    medical marijuana law put state employees in the position of
    violating federal law. The federal government classifies marijuana as
    a Schedule 1 drug, a category reserved for drugs that have “no
    currently accepted medical use.”

    But after taking office Jan. 1, the Republican governor focused on
    New Mexico’s pressing budget issues and said repeal was not a
    priority in the 2011 legislative session.

    Smith said, however, he was encouraged by an effort in Montana to
    repeal that state’s medical marijuana law. Montana House Speaker Mike
    Milburn argues the multimillion dollar marijuana industry has gone
    far beyond what voters envisioned when they voted for it in 2004.

    Martinez spokesman Scott Darnell said she would sign a repeal of New
    Mexico’s medical marijuana law if it reached her desk.

    Some legislators who voted for the law originally said earlier this
    month they were troubled by the expansion in medical conditions that
    qualify for the program and the growing number of people using it.

    Only patients with conditions approved by the health secretary can
    legally use medical marijuana. When New Mexico’s law went into effect
    in July 2007, the state had seven approved conditions, including
    cancer, glaucoma, multiple sclerosis, epilepsy and HIV-AIDS. Now
    there are 16, plus some people in hospice care can qualify. The
    program is overseen by the state Department of Health.

    As of Feb. 16, the day before Smith introduced his bill, New Mexico
    had 3,218 active patients.

    Smith’s measure is expected to be heard next week by the House
    Consumer and Public Affairs Committee, whose vice chairman is
    Democratic Rep. Antonio Maestas of Albuquerque, who sponsored the
    medical marijuana law in the House.

    Maestas said the program has proved to be more valuable than
    expected, with soldiers returning from war using it to treat post
    traumatic stress disorder.

    “Moving medical marijuana out of the criminal justice realm is
    difficult for many people to accept, but I believe the vast majority
    are in agreement it was a great decision and should not be rolled
    back,” he said.

    Smith said it’s hard to argue against people in pain who say medical
    marijuana makes them feel better, but he believes there are medical
    alternatives.

    He said he’s encouraged by the 27 co-sponsors, both Republicans and
    Democrats, who signed onto the one-page bill when it was introduced
    earlier this month.

    “The people I got to sign the bill were very passionate about wanting
    to get rid of medical marijuana,” Smith said.

    **********************************************************************

    Prepared by: Richard Lake, Focus Alert Specialist http://www.mapinc.org

    ===
    .
    DrugSense provides many services at no charge, but they are not
    free to produce. Your contributions make DrugSense and its Media
    Awareness Project (MAP) happen. Please donate today. Our secure Web
    server at http://www.drugsense.org/donate.htm accepts credit cards
    and Paypal. Or, mail your check or money order to:
    .
    DrugSense
    14252 Culver Drive #328
    Irvine, CA 92604-0326.
    (800) 266 5759
    .
    DrugSense is a 501c(3) non-profit organization dedicated to raising
    awareness about the expensive, ineffective, and destructive “War on
    Drugs.” Donations are tax deductible to the extent provided by law.
    .
    Unsubscribe: http://drugsense.org/unsub.htm

     
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