• Drug Policy

    CMA Journal Article Backs Drug Injection Site

    Federal government accused of ignoring addicts by opposing Vancouver site

    An article in the Canadian Medical Association Journal slams the federal government for its efforts to shut down Insite in downtown Vancouver, Canada’s only safe injection site for drug addicts.

    Injection booths at Insite in Vancouver. Insite is the first legal supervised injection site in North America and is located in Vancouver’s east side. Injection booths at Insite in Vancouver. Insite is the first legal supervised injection site in North America and is located in Vancouver’s east side. (Jonathan Hayward/Canadian Press)A co-author of the paper has told CBC News he believes the federal government should stand aside, allow the centre to operate, and abandon an appeal to the Supreme Court

    “We’ve concluded after reviewing the evidence that Insite is doing what it’s supposed to be doing, and furthermore that we’re very concerned that the federal government has misled on the science,” said Dr. Michael Rachlis, a professor of health policy at the University of Toronto.

    Insite was established in 2003, when there was a Liberal government in Ottawa, but has been fighting for its survival since the Conservatives came to power in 2006.

    ‘We’re calling on the federal government to drop the current action they have in the Supreme Court.’ — Michael Rachlis, University of Toronto

  • Cannabis & Hemp

    Smoking Marijuana Relieves Some Pain: Study

    Smoking marijuana does help relieve a certain amount of pain, a small but well-designed Canadian study has found.

    People who suffer chronic neuropathic or nerve pain from damage or dysfunction of the nervous system have few treatment options with varying degrees of effectiveness and side-effects.

    Neuropathic pain is caused by damage to nerves that don’t repair, which can make the skin sensitive to a light touch.

    Cannabis pills have been shown to help treat some types of pain but the effects and risks from smoked cannabis were unclear.

    Smoked cannabis for chronic neuropathic pain: a randomized controlled trial, http://mapinc.org/url/THI4fclA

  • Cannabis & Hemp - Hot Off The 'Net

    Six Drug Czars, and Between Them They Can’t Muster a Decent Argument for Marijuana Prohibition

    By Jacob Sullum

    “Our opposition to legalizing marijuana is grounded not in ideology but in facts and experience,” say drug czar Gil Kerlikowske and his five predecessors in a Los Angeles Times op-ed piece that urges Californians to vote against Proposition 19. They argue that voters should listen to them because they are “experts in the field of drug policy, policing, prevention, education and treatment.” If this is the best case the experts can make against marijuana legalization, they had better call in the amateurs.

    Kerlikowske et al. say it’s not true that “legalizing and taxing marijuana would generate much-needed revenue,” because everyone will grow his own, thereby avoiding sales and excise taxes. Although “people don’t typically grow their own tobacco or distill their own spirits,” they say, marijuana is different because it is “easy and cheap to cultivate, indoors or out.” If growing pot were as easy as the Six Drug Czars imply, there would not be much of a market for all the books and periodicals that explain how to do it properly. In any case, one could also say that tomatoes are “easy and cheap” to grow, or that beer is “easy and cheap” to brew. I’ve done both, but I still buy tomatoes and beer in stores. The supply is more reliable and varied, and it’s a lot easier. Accounting for the time and effort required to grow tomatoes and brew beer, buying them in the store is cheaper too, even though I have to pay taxes on them.

  • Focus Alerts

    #449 Just Say No To The Drug Czars

    Date: Wed, 25 Aug 2010
    Subject: #449 Just Say No To The Drug Czars

    JUST SAY NO TO THE DRUG CZARS

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

    DrugSense FOCUS Alert #449 – Wednesday, August 25nd, 2010

    Today the Los Angeles Times printed the opinion of drug czars, past
    and present.

    As drug czars are required to do by law they selected their “facts”
    for their propaganda effect.

    Your letters to the editor will let the newspaper know that there are
    other valid views.

    Proposition 19 news clippings may be found at http://www.mapinc.org/topic/Proposition+19

    Please note the new Proposition 19 website at http://yeson19.com/ –
    and please do whatever you can to support the effort.

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

    Source: Los Angeles Times (CA)

    Page: A17

    Copyright: 2010 Los Angeles Times

    Contact: http://mapinc.org/url/bc7El3Yo

    Authors: Gil Kerlikowske, John Walters, Barry McCaffrey, Lee Brown,
    Bob Martinez, William Bennett

    Note: This commentary was written by Gil Kerlikowske, John Walters,
    Barry McCaffrey, Lee Brown, Bob Martinez and William Bennett,
    directors of the Office of National Drug Control Policy in the
    administrations of Presidents Obama, George W. Bush, Bill Clinton and
    George H.W. Bush.

    CALIFORNIA SHOULD JUST SAY NO

    Legalizing Marijuana Through Prop. 19 Would Only Add to the State’s
    Problems.

    Californians will face an important decision in November when they
    vote on whether to legalize marijuana. Proponents of Proposition 19,
    the Regulate, Control and Tax Cannabis Act of 2010, rely on two main
    arguments: that legalizing and taxing marijuana would generate
    much-needed revenue, and that legalization would allow law enforcement
    to focus on other crimes. As experts in the field of drug policy,
    policing, prevention, education and treatment, we can report that
    neither of these claims withstand scrutiny.

    No country in the world has legalized marijuana to the extent
    envisioned by Proposition 19, so it is impossible to predict precisely
    the consequences of wholesale legalization. We can say with near
    certainty, however, that marijuana use would increase if it were
    legal, because some people now abstain simply because it is illegal.

    We also know that increased use brings increased social
    costs.

    Proponents of marijuana legalization often point to Amsterdam’s
    “coffee shop” marijuana sales, rarely mentioning that the Dutch have
    dramatically reduced what at one time were thousands of shops to only
    a few hundred — after being inundated with “drug tourists,”
    drug-related organized crime involvement and public nuisance problems.
    During the period of marijuana commercialization and expansion, there
    was a tripling of lifetime use rates and a more than doubling of
    past-month use among 18- to 20-year-olds, according to independent
    research.

    Closer to home, in a nationally representative roadside survey, the
    National Highway Traffic Safety Administration found that 8% of
    nighttime weekend drivers tested positive for marijuana. The vast
    majority were tested using an oral swab procedure that makes it highly
    unlikely that the use occurred more than four hours prior.

    A 2004 meta-analysis published in the journal Drug and Alcohol Review
    of studies conducted in several localities showed that between 4% and
    14% of drivers who sustained injuries or died in traffic accidents
    tested positive for delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol, or THC, the active
    ingredient in marijuana. Because marijuana negatively affects drivers’
    judgment, motor skills and reaction time, it stands to reason that
    legalizing marijuana would lead to more accidents and fatalities
    involving drivers under its influence.

    Regarding the supposed economic benefits of taxing marijuana, some
    comparison with two drugs that are already regulated and taxed —
    alcohol and tobacco — is worth considering. People don’t typically
    grow their own tobacco or distill their own spirits, so consumers
    accept high taxes on them as retail products. Marijuana, though, is
    easy and cheap to cultivate, indoors or out, and Proposition 19 would
    allow individuals to grow as much as 25 square feet of marijuana for
    “personal consumption.”

    Why would people volunteer to pay high taxes on marijuana if it were
    legalized? The answer is that many would not, and the underground
    market, adapting to undercut any new taxes, would barely diminish at
    all.

    The current healthcare and criminal justice costs associated with
    alcohol and tobacco far surpass the tax revenue they generate, and
    very little of the taxes collected on these substances is contributed
    to offsetting their substantial social and health costs. For every
    dollar society collects in taxes on alcohol, for example, we end up
    spending eight more in social costs. That is hardly a recipe for
    fiscal health.

    A recent Rand Corp. report, “Altered State,” found that it is
    difficult to predict estimated revenue from marijuana taxes, and that
    legalization would increase consumption but could also lead to
    widespread tax evasion and a “race to the bottom” in terms of local
    tax rates.

    Another pro-legalization argument is that it would free up law
    enforcement resources to concentrate on “real” crimes. Two of us are
    former police chiefs, who in our combined careers protected five of
    America’s largest cities, including New York, Houston and Seattle, and
    served as elected heads of the nation’s largest professional police
    associations. We interacted with tens of thousands of officers, and it
    is our experience that an overwhelming majority of police
    professionals does not support legalizing marijuana.

    Law enforcement officers do not currently focus much effort on
    arresting adults whose only crime is possessing small amounts of
    marijuana. This proposition would burden them with new and complicated
    enforcement duties. The proposition would require officers to enforce
    laws against “ingesting or smoking marijuana while minors are
    present.” Would this apply in a private home? And is a minor “present”
    if they are 15 feet away, or 20? Perhaps California law enforcement
    officers will be required to carry tape measures next to their handcuffs.

    As should be evident, despite the millions spent on marketing the
    idea, legalized marijuana can’t solve California’s budget crisis or
    reduce criminal justice costs. Our combined opposition to this
    ill-considered scheme spans four different administrations and
    represents the collective wisdom of a former secretary of Education, a
    governor, a mayor and teacher, an Army general, a drug policy
    researcher and two police chiefs. Our opposition to legalizing
    marijuana is grounded not in ideology but in facts and experience.

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

    Suggestions for writing letters are at our Media Activism Center
    http://www.mapinc.org/resource/#guides

    For the latest facts about marijuana please see http://www.drugwarfacts.org/cms/node/53

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

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

    =.

  • Focus Alerts

    #448 California’s Proposition 19

    Date: Sun, 22 Aug 2010
    Subject: #448 California’s Proposition 19

    CALIFORNIA’S PROPOSITION 19

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

    DrugSense FOCUS Alert #448 – Sunday, August 22nd, 2010

    Today the San Francisco Chronicle printed two OPEDs.

    The first ‘Californians Must Look at Science of Marijuana’
    http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v10/n677/a08.html is interesting for
    what is not disclosed. It is by an addiction therapist. The
    therapeutic community has a vested interest in continuing the current
    system. About half of all users in therapy are there because of their
    marijuana use. Of those, over 40% are there from court referrals —
    they take therapy as a preferred alternative to jail whether they need
    it or not. Many of the others are there because their parents’ health
    insurance will buy therapy as an alternative to being expelled from
    school or referred to the juvenile justice system.

    The second ‘Legalizing Marijuana Is Bad For California’
    http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v10.n679.a06.html is by Susan
    Manheimer, the president of the California Police Chiefs Association.
    There is more spin and propaganda in the OPED than we can count.

    Your letters to the editor about either or both are invited.

    Opinion items are always good letter targets. They are MAP archived
    at http://www.mapinc.org/opinion.htm

    The same applies to Proposition 19 items which may be found at
    http://www.mapinc.org/topic/Proposition+19

    Please check out the new Proposition 19 website at http://yeson19.com/
    – and please do whatever you can to support the effort.

    We have started a list of who appears to be for and against
    Proposition 19 based on MAP’s news clippings.

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

    FOR

    The International Longshore and Warehouse Union

    The National Black Police Association

    The United Food and Commercial Workers Union

    The California National Association for the Advancement of Colored People

    Law Enforcement Against Prohibition

    The Drug Policy Alliance Network

    Students for Sensible Drug Policy

    The National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws

    The American Civil Liberties Union

    The Courage Campaign

    Dr. Joycelyn Elders, the former United States Surgeon General

    The Cannabis Consumers Campaign

    DRCNet

    DrugSense

    Common Sense for Drug Policy

    Marijuana Policy Project

    Citizens Opposing Prohibition

    The California Black Chamber of Commerce

    Retired Orange County Judge James Gray

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

    AGAINST

    The California Chamber of Commerce

    The California Police Chiefs Association

    The White House Office of National Drug Control Policy

    Mexican Marijuana Trafficking Organizations

    The California Narcotics Officer’s Association

    Gubernatorial candidates Meg Whitman and Jerry Brown

    Senators Dianne Feinstein and Barbara Boxer

    The California League of Cities

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

    Suggestions for writing letters are at our Media Activism Center
    http://www.mapinc.org/resource/#guides

    For the latest facts about marijuana please see
    http://www.drugwarfacts.org/cms/node/53

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

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

  • Hot Off The 'Net

    Black Cops Say Legalize Marijuana

    Neill Franklin, a 33-year veteran cop from Baltimore, talks about why the National Black Police Association and many individual African American officers are supporting an initiative to legalize marijuana in California. Neill is a member of Law Enforcement Against Prohibition (LEAP), which any civilian can join for free at http://www.CopsSayLegalizeDrugs.com/

  • Drug Policy - Hot Off The 'Net

    Lessons Not Learned Since Tragic Drug Raid in Atlanta

    By Bill Piper

    Money spent prosecuting and jailing low-level offenders is money not being spent on drug treatment or education.

    It’s been almost four years since Atlanta narcotics officers shot and killed 92-year-old Kathryn Johnston and planted evidence in a failed attempt to frame her – and her family is just now receiving justice in the form of a $4.9 million settlement. That of course won’t bring Ms. Johnston back. And despite some cosmetic changes to how drug law enforcement works, very little has changed. City officials will continue to pressure police officers to meet informal arrest quotas, police will continue to violently raid the homes of people suspected of only nonviolent offenses, and taxpayers will continue to foot the bill of a failed drug policy. Real reform is needed.