• Letter of the Week

    Letter Of The Week

    Cannabis Cat and Mouse

    Pushing 60 now, I’ve long been tired of the cat-and-mouse game that
    using cannabis invokes. I totally lost any respect for the law at a
    tender age. Faith in government? What, the government that wants to
    see me in a cage? The prohibition has been quite corrosive on my and
    many of my comrades’ patriotism.

    We can restore respect for law, and law enforcement, as well as faith
    in the American way by ending this prohibition. We could even end up
    like the Dutch–who’ve managed to make pot boring in the eyes of that
    country’s youth and whose rates of use are but a small fraction of ours.

    The war on cannabis has its roots in racism, and is now the new Jim
    Crow. It has been a handy cudgel to whup on Mexicans, blacks and
    those darn hippies. Despite the claims, it has never had anything to
    do with public safety.

    This war on our own citizens can be ended. The passage of Prop. 19
    will force a large crack in the dike. Much of the delay, deceit, and
    obfuscation seen after the passage of Prop. 215 should be
    neutralized by Assemblyman Tom Ammiano’s recently introduced
    legislation to create a uniform statewide regulatory system. “If 19
    passes, we’ll be ready,” he asserts. Prop 19 includes language that
    allows modification by the Legislature. This was missing in 215.

    My ballot is marked Yes. I hope yours is, too.

    Jay Bergstrom

    Forest Ranch

    Pubdate: Thu, 21 Oct 2010

    Source: Chico News & Review, The (CA)

  • Cannabis & Hemp - DrugSense - Feature

    Could Legalizing Marijuana in California Help Cure Breast

    Newshawk: Medical Marijuana www.drugwarfacts.org/cms/node/54
    Pubdate: Tue, 26 Oct 2010
    Source: AlterNet (US Web)
    Author: Mary Jane Borden

    For 70 years, we’ve been taught that marijuana has no accepted
    medical use and that its high potential for abuse demands absolute
    prohibition. Medical research has been nearly impossible since
    obtaining the substance for legitimate studies is restricted by the
    federal government.

    But for a moment, forget the anti-drug ads of stoned teenagers
    passing the bong and click instead on the National Library of
    Medicine’s website, “Pubmed.gov.” Look under “breast cancer and
    cannabinoid” and you will find studies in scientific journals like
    Breast Cancer Research and Treatment that should warrant immediate
    action: “Our data demonstrate the efficacy of CBD in pre-clinical
    models of breast cancer. The results have the potential to lead to
    the development of novel non-toxic compounds for the treatment of
    breast cancer metastasis…”

    A study in Molecular Cancer Therapeutics says, “These results
    indicate that CB1 and CB2 receptors could be used to develop novel
    therapeutic strategies against breast cancer growth and metastasis.”
    And this from the journal Molecular Cancer: “these results provide a
    strong preclinical evidence for the use of cannabinoid-based
    therapies for the management of ErbB2-positive breast cancer.” What’s
    more, this basic research also extols the safety of potential
    cannabinoid therapies.

    The science behind these studies finds that the human body contains
    its own internal system interrelated with molecules in the cannabis
    plant–AKA marijuana. A neurological signaling structure called the
    endocannabinoid system is now known to govern numerous bodily
    processes like appetite, pain, and even the birth of new brain cells.
    Cannabinoid receptors, called CB1 and CB2, are located in various
    cell membranes and activated by the body’s own cannabinoid molecules
    (endocannabinoids), as well as those unique to the cannabis plant
    (THC, CBD) and synthetically-derived cannabinoids like MarinolRegistered .

    And now, the latest research is proving that cannabinoids, as part of
    this bodily system, play a mitigating role in breast cancer.

    Breast cancer is a frightening diagnosis that will confront about 1
    in 8 American women this year. Some 40,000 will die from it. An
    unusual lump in a breast can grow through four increasingly incurable
    stages and sometimes into other tissue. Therapies involve invasive
    surgery, heavy radiation, and toxic chemotherapy. Current anti-cancer
    drugs may kill cancer cells, but they also destroy non-cancerous
    tissue and damage heart muscle. Intractable nausea and vomiting
    comprise just one side effect. The disease may be worse than the cure
    but the cure can also kill.

    But suppose some scientist has just come out of the jungle with an
    unknown plant that holds this much promise. It would be featured in
    the nightly news and on the front page of every newspaper. Well, we
    now have before us scientific clues that seem to point toward a
    revolution in breast cancer treatment, yet the government still
    manages to bury this amazing discovery.

    Why? Politics. The “Devil Weed” has always been a favorite target for
    tough-on-crime politicians. Over the decades, they have assembled a
    labyrinth of governmental agencies with multi-billion dollar budgets
    that enforce marijuana laws, ignore the science, thwart clinical
    research–and constantly reinforce anti-pot stereotypes.

    [continues] http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v10.n870.a09.html

  • Letter of the Week

    Letter Of The Week

    WE SHOULD RECONSIDER WHAT’S DRIVING OUR DRUG POLICY

    Bravo to Mary O’Grady for focusing on the economics of U.S. drug
    policy ( “The Economics of Drug Violence,” Americas, Oct. 11 ).

    In 1975 I was the lead Office of Management and Budget person on an
    interagency drug interdiction task force involving the White House
    Office of Drug Policy, the OMB, Justice Department ( Immigration
    Service-Border Patrol and Drug Enforcement Administration ) and
    Treasury ( Customs Service ). We presented conclusions to White
    House staff and to Treasury and Justice leadership based on estimates
    that we were interdicting about 5% of marijuana and about the same
    single-digit percent of “hard” drugs coming across U.S. borders.

    Resources devoted to the drug interdiction strategy were already
    enormous at that time. Officers of the U.S. government ( Border
    Patrol, Customs and DEA ) were actually involved in incidents of
    shooting at each other, in connection with claiming the enforcement
    “turf” between the ports of entry. Moreover, we estimated that a
    doubling of resources devoted to this interdiction task would yield a
    negligible increase in seizures and interdiction effectiveness, with
    a then unknown increase in profit margins to traffickers.

    U.S. drug enforcement policy has been tragically wrong-headed for
    more than a generation for several reasons. Foremost is the failure
    to look at drug policy with an economic, rather than an ideological,
    lens. Our policies of increasing investment in interdiction have
    raised profit margins for narco-terrorists, state-terror groups and
    criminal syndicates. Our policies of increasing “investment” have
    been driven by federal agency union leadership interested in
    increasing membership and the scope of their mission. Our inability
    as a nation to look at the deteriorating world of drug-financed
    terrorism and lawlessness may be the result of our policy of
    incremental increases. We are like the frog in the pot slowly being
    boiled to death. It is certainly a result of our failure to think
    seriously about supply and demand effects of U.S. drug policy.

    Like another conservative economist and observer of our failed
    policy, George Shultz, I favor legalization of marijuana. I will
    vote in favor of Proposition 19 on Nov. 2, as one step in the right
    direction.

    John A. Fisher

    Menlo Park, Calif.

    Pubdate: Thu, 14 Oct 2010

    Source: Wall Street Journal (US)

    Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v10/n826/a02.html

  • Cannabis & Hemp - Focus Alerts

    #461 Debunking False Fears About Proposition 19

    DEBUNKING FALSE FEARS ABOUT PROP. 19

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

    DrugSense FOCUS Alert #461 – Tuesday, October 19th, 2010

    If you have been following the news at http://mapinc.org/find?272
    about Proposition 19 it should be clear that the campaign rhetoric is
    heating up.

    Below is an editorial that debunks myths being spread about the initiative.

    Ways You May Support Prop. 19 Now –
    http://www.mapinc.org/alert/0460.html provides suggestions for how
    you may help during the remaining weeks until the election.

  • Letter of the Week

    Letter Of The Week

    IT’S TIME TO STOP THE WAR ON DRUGS

    Editor:

    Regarding “Prop. 203 is a wolf in sheep’s clothing”: Calling someone,
    or something, a “wolf in sheep’s clothing” implies dishonesty, an
    attempt to deceive. But the pro-freedom lobby has never tried to hide
    the fact that they see medical marijuana as a stepping-stone to true
    legalization. Their motives are quite clear.

    What’s not so clear are the motives of people who refuse to legalize,
    even for medical use, the one drug that has never killed anyone. The
    people who say they want to reduce drug use by continuing the policies
    and procedures that have failed, for 30 years, to reduce drug use. The
    people who say they want to protect us from our own choices by leaving
    in place laws that do only harm. If you’re going to question motives,
    question the motives of those who stand against freedom, not those who
    are trying to restore it.

    The war on drugs is a forever war. It can’t be won; it can only be
    stopped. And the time to stop it is now. Not another 30 years; not
    another trillion dollars from now. Not another million prisoners in
    the U.S. from now. And not another 28,000 dead in Mexico from now.
    Now.

    Lora Lee Nye believes that Big Brother should hold dominion over how
    you live and how you die. Those she calls “wolves” believe that you
    are competent and entitled to make your own choices. What say you?

    Rita Stricker

    Chino Valley

    Pubdate: Thu, 7 Oct 2010

    Source: Daily Courier (Prescott, AZ)

    Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v10/n768/a08.html

  • Announcements - Focus Alerts

    #460 Ways You May Support Prop. 19 Now

    DrugSense FOCUS Alert #460 – Thursday, October 14th, 2010

    Here are some ways you may support Proposition 19 between now and election day:

    Volunteer for Online Phone Bank Training. Watch this video
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cxr0Pu6SoNk then go to
    http://yeson19.com/user/register and signed up. It is an easy
    process. You may call from any state.

    Donate https://secure.yeson19.com/page/contribute

    Distribute Proposition 19 endorsements http://yeson19.com/endorsements

    Your letters in response to the newspaper articles and opinions are
    an important part of educating the voters. Newspaper clippings about
    Proposition 19 are posted at http://www.mapinc.org/find?272

    Common Sense for Drug Policy has produced a special edition of Drug
    War Facts for Proposition 19. It is called “Marijuana Facts on Drug
    War Facts” and can be found online in the Drug War Facts Marijuana
    chapter at http://www.DrugWarFacts.org/cms/Marijuana

    DrugSense has endorsed Proposition 19, writing “DrugSense/MAP has
    decided that winning Prop 19 is so crucial that we should take the
    extraordinary step of endorsing it. DrugSense has never endorsed a
    candidate or initiative before. We enjoy our position as being the
    repository of drug policy information and strive to present it in a
    totally non-biased way. We let the facts speak for themselves and
    encourage voters decide their positions based on these facts. But
    upon research and discussion, we agree that Prop 19 is a must win for
    reform; we can’t sit out this election on the sidelines.”

    It’s not what others do – it’s what YOU do.

  • Cannabis & Hemp

    US OH: Up in Smoke

    Newshawk: Medical Marijuana www.drugwarfacts.org/cms/node/54
    Pubdate: Wed, 1 Sep 2010
    Source: Columbus Monthly (OH)
    Pages: 81 and 82
    Author: Jo Ingles

    UP IN SMOKE

    The Truth Is Medical Marijuana Is a Dead Issue in Ohio. But a Band of
    Dedicated Supporters – Including Two Legislators – Refuse to Give Up
    on the Idea.

    Brandy Zink, who grew up in Westerville, says she was 12 years old
    when she took a drag off her first joint at, of all places, a church
    camp. She liked it. So she’s kept smoking the stuff, pretty steadily,
    since she was 14. But it wasn’t all about getting high (although she
    acknowledges that was part of the appeal when she was young). It’s
    also because it helps combat the effects of her epilepsy, which she’s
    struggled with since birth. Over the years, she’s found that it has
    eased muscle pain, reduced stuttering and prevented seizures. “I
    notice that when I have access to cannabis, I don’t have seizures,
    but when I don’t, I do,” she says. It’s been so effective, she’s
    ditched her other medicine.

    She used to obtain marijuana through the black market and people she
    calls compassionate caregivers. Zink knew, however, that using pot in
    Ohio made her a criminal. “Can you imagine living with a debilitating
    medical condition and then on top of it, being worried about being
    arrested?” she says.

    After years of choosing between being in pain or fearing that she’d
    get caught using marijuana to alleviate the discomfort, Zink, 33,
    decided to leave her Ohio home. She now lives and works in Michigan,
    where she possesses a card that allows her to smoke dope legally.

    [continues] http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v10/n000/a052.html

  • Letter of the Week

    Published Letters Awards www.mapinc.org/lteaward.htm

    LETTER OF THE WEEK

    POT DISASTER DIDN’T HAPPEN

    It’s hardly surprising that growing numbers of Californians want to
    legalize marijuana for adults.

    When Proposition 215 passed in 1996, legalizing medical marijuana,
    prohibition supporters issued dire warnings of increased crime, teen
    drug use and traffic fatalities.

    None of these things happened, and life has gone on as normal. With
    Proposition 19, prohibition supporters are again crying wolf and
    again being ignored – as they should be.

    Anders Froehlich, San Rafael

    Pubdate: Wed, 29 Sep 2010

    Source: San Francisco Chronicle (CA)

  • Focus Alerts

    #459 Please Support The Marijuana Propositions

    PLEASE SUPPORT THE MARIJUANA PROPOSITIONS

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

    DrugSense FOCUS Alert #459 – Friday, October 8th, 2010

    This November 2nd voters will decide state wide initiatives of
    importance to the reform community.

    Newspaper clippings about California’s Proposition 19 are MAP posted
    at http://www.mapinc.org/find?272

    Clippings about Arizona’s Proposition 203 are at
    http://www.mapinc.org/find?273 and Oregon’s Measure 74 at
    http://www.mapinc.org/find?276

    Your letters in response to the newspaper articles and opinions are
    an important part of educating the voters.

    Americans for Safe Access has a new Proposition 19 FAQ page which
    answers questions California’s medicinal marijuana community may have
    http://www.safeaccessnow.org/article.php?id=6127

    Common Sense for Drug Policy has produced a special edition of Drug
    War Facts for Proposition 19. It is called “Marijuana Facts on Drug
    War Facts” and can be found online in the Drug War Facts Marijuana
    chapter at http://www.DrugWarFacts.org/cms/Marijuana

    A related 2 page Fact Sheet designed to answer common questions about
    marijuana is at
    http://drugwarfacts.org/cms/files/Marijuana-Facts-from-Drug-War-Facts.pdf

    Here are some ways you may support Proposition 19:

    Donate https://secure.yeson19.com/page/contribute

    Volunteer http://yeson19.com/volunteer

    Register to vote – the deadline for California voters is October 18th
    http://yeson19.com/vote

    Distribute Proposition 19 endorsements
    http://yeson19.com/endorsements and
    http://yeson19.com/sites/default/files/Yes%20on%2019%20Endorsements.pdf

    Below is a small selection of letters by folks like you had printed
    since we wrote about letter writing September 18th
    http://www.mapinc.org/alert/0453.html

    In a close election your letters could make the difference.

    Continues: http://www.mapinc.org/alert/0459.html