• Focus Alerts

    #324 Is The Drug War Damaging America?

    Date: Wed, 22 Feb 2006
    Subject: #324 Is The Drug War Damaging America?

    IS THE DRUG WAR DAMAGING AMERICA?

    *********************PLEASE COPY AND DISTRIBUTE*************************

    DrugSense FOCUS Alert #324 – Wednesday, 22 February 2006

    In his column, below, the Wall Street Journal’s Deputy Editor for
    International Affairs George Melloan provides a lengthy list of
    provocative criticisms of the modern day Prohibition – The War on Drugs.

    This is good news for those seeking increased discussion in major
    media regarding failed public drug policies. The Wall Street Journal
    is the second most widely read newspaper in the United States. It is
    well known for opinion page support of the drug war.

    But it is also know for printing letters in response to it’s opinion
    page content, as illustrated by the seven letters printed in response
    to this editorial in 1998:

    http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v98/n439/a04.html

    Please consider writing a Letter to the Editor and sending it
    immediately. Letters of 200 words or less are more likely to be printed.

    Thanks for your effort and support.

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

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

    Pubdate: Tue, 21 Feb 2006
    Source: Wall Street Journal (US)
    Column: Global View
    Page: A19
    Copyright: 2006 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
    Contact: [email protected]
    Website: http://www.wsj.com/
    Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/487
    Author: George Melloan

    MUSINGS ABOUT THE WAR ON DRUGS

    Economist Milton Friedman predicted in Newsweek nearly 34 years ago
    that Richard Nixon’s ambitious “global war against drugs” would be a
    failure. Much evidence today suggests that he was right. But the war
    rages on with little mainstream challenge of its basic weapon,
    prohibition.

    To be sure, Mr. Friedman wasn’t the only critic. William Buckley’s
    National Review declared a decade ago that the U.S. had “lost” the
    drug war, bolstering its case with testimony from the likes of Joseph
    D. McNamara, a former police chief in Kansas City, Mo., and San Jose,
    Calif. But today discussion of the war’s depressing cost-benefit ratio
    is being mainly conducted in the blogosphere, where the tone is
    predominantly libertarian. In the broader polity, support for the
    great Nixon crusade remains sufficiently strong to discourage
    effective counterattacks.

    In broaching this subject, I offer the usual disclaimer. One beer
    before dinner is sufficient to my mind-bending needs. I’ve never
    sampled any of the no-no stuff and have no desire to do so. So let’s
    proceed to discuss this emotion-laden issue as objectively as possible.

    The drug war has become costly, with some $50 billion in direct
    outlays by all levels of government, and much higher indirect costs,
    such as the expanded prison system to house half a million drug-law
    offenders and the burdens on the court system. Civil rights sometimes
    are infringed. One sharply rising expense is for efforts to interdict
    illegal drug shipments into the U.S., which is budgeted at $1.4
    billion this fiscal year, up 41% from two years ago.

    That reflects government’s tendency to throw more money at a program
    that isn’t working. Not only have the various efforts not stopped the
    flow but they have begun to create friction with countries the U.S.
    would prefer to have as friends.

    As the Journal’s Mary O’Grady has written, a good case can be made
    that U.S.-sponsored efforts to eradicate coca crops in Latin America
    are winning converts among Latin peasants to the anti-American causes
    of Cuba’s Fidel Castro and Venezuela’s Hugo Chavez. Their friend Evo
    Morales was just elected president of Bolivia mainly by the peasant
    following he won by opposing a U.S.-backed coca-eradication program.
    Colombia’s huge cocaine business still thrives despite U.S. combative
    efforts, supporting, among others, leftist guerrillas.

    More seriously, Mexico is being destabilized by drug gangs warring
    over access to the lucrative U.S. market. A wave of killings of
    officials and journalists in places like Nuevo Laredo and Acapulco is
    reminiscent of the 1930s Prohibition-era crime waves in Al Capone’s
    Chicago and the Purple Gang’s Detroit. In Afghanistan, al Qaeda and
    the Taliban are proselytizing opium-poppy growers by saying that the
    U.S. is their enemy. The claim, unlike many they use, has the merit of
    being true.

    Milton Friedman saw the problem. To the extent that authorities
    curtail supplies of marijuana, cocaine and heroin coming into the rich
    U.S. market, the retail price of these substances goes up, making the
    trade immensely profitable — tax-free, of course. The more the U.S.
    spends on interdiction, the more incentive it creates for taking the
    risk of running drugs.

    In 1933, the U.S. finally gave up on the 13-year prohibition of
    alcohol — a drug that is by some measures more intoxicating and
    dangerous to health than marijuana. That effort to alter human
    behavior left a legacy of corruption, criminality, and deaths and
    blindness from the drinking of bad booze. America’s use of alcohol
    went up after repeal but no serious person today suggests a repeat of
    the alcohol experiment. Yet prohibition is still being attempted, at
    great expense, for the small portion of the population — perhaps
    little more than 5% — who habitually use proscribed drugs.

    Mind-altering drugs do of course cause problems. Their use contributes
    to crime, automobile accidents, work-force dropouts and family
    breakups. But the most common contributor to these social problems is
    not the illegal substances. It is alcohol. Society copes by punishing
    drunken misbehavior, offering rehabilitation programs and warning
    youths of the dangers. Most Americans drink moderately, however,
    creating no problems either for themselves or society.

    Education can be an antidote for self-abuse. When it was finally
    proved that cigarettes were a health risk, smoking by young people
    dropped off and many started lecturing their parents about that bad
    habit. LSD came and then went after its dangers became evident.
    Heroin’s addictive and debilitative powers are well-known enough to
    limit its use to a small population. Private educational programs
    about the risks of drug abuse have spread throughout the country with
    good effect.

    Some doctors argue that the use of some drugs is too limited.
    Marijuana can help control nausea after chemotherapy, relieve
    multiple-sclerosis pain and help patients whose appetites have been
    lowered to a danger level by AIDS. Morphine, some say, is used too
    sparingly for easing the terrible pain of terminally ill cancer
    patients. It is argued that pot and cocaine use by inner-city youths
    is a self-prescribed medicine for the depression and despair that
    haunts their existence. Doctors prescribe Prozac for the same problems
    of the middle class.

    So what’s the alternative? An army of government employees now makes a
    living from the drug laws and has a rather conflictive interest in
    claiming both that the drug laws are working and that more money is
    needed. The challenge is issued: Do you favor legalization? In fact,
    most drugs are legal, including alcohol, tobacco and coffee and the
    great array of modern, life-saving drugs administered by doctors. To
    be precise, the question should be do you favor legalization or
    decriminalization of the sale and use of marijuana, cocaine, heroin
    and methamphetamines?

    A large percentage of Americans will probably say no, mainly because
    they are law-abiding people who maintain high moral and ethical
    standards and don’t want to surrender to a small minority that flouts
    the laws, whether in the ghettos of Washington D.C. or Beverly Hills
    salons. The concern about damaging society’s fabric is legitimate. But
    another question needs to be asked: Is that fabric being damaged now?

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

    Additional suggestions for writing LTEs are at our Media Activism Center:

    http://www.mapinc.org/resource/#guides

    Or contact MAP Media Activism Facilitator Steve Heath for personal
    tips on how to write LTEs that get printed.

    [email protected]

    Please join Steve and other LTE writing friends of MAP this Thursday
    evening at 9 p.m. Eastern, 8 p.m. Central, 7 p.m. Mountain, or 6 p.m.
    Pacific for a roundtable discussion of how to write LTEs that get print.

    See: http://mapinc.org/resource/paltalk.htm for details on how you
    can participate in this meeting. Discussion is conducted with live
    Voice (microphone and speakers all that is needed) and also via text
    messaging. The Paltalk software is free and easy to download and install.

    The password for this gathering will be: welcome-pal

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

    Please Send Us a Copy of Your Letter

    Please post a copy of your letter or report your action to the sent
    letter list ([email protected]) if you are subscribed, or by
    E-mailing a copy directly to [email protected] if you are not
    subscribed. Your letter will then be forwarded to the list so others
    can learn from your efforts.

    Subscribing to the Sent LTE list ([email protected]) will help you to
    review other sent LTEs and perhaps come up with new ideas or
    approaches as well as keeping others aware of your important writing
    efforts.

    To subscribe to the Sent LTE mailing list see

    http://www.mapinc.org/lists/index.htm#form

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

    Prepared by: Stephen Heath, MAP Media Activism Facilitator =.

  • Focus Alerts

    #323 United States Students Score

    Date: Tue, 7 Feb 2006
    Subject: #323 United States Students Score

    UNITED STATES STUDENTS SCORE

    *********************PLEASE COPY AND DISTRIBUTE*************************

    DrugSense FOCUS Alert #323 – Tuesday, 7 February 2006

    First it was a superb editorial in the New York Times Saturday “The
    High Cost of Public Information” http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v06/n142/a05.html

    Today it was a feature article in USA TODAY “College Financial Aid
    Rules Loosened” http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v06/n161/a05.html

    What’s the fuss about?

    In 1998 Students for Sensible Drug Policy (SSDP) http://www.daregeneration.com
    was organized to oppose a little known provision of the Higher
    Education Act (HEA). College students with drug convictions were
    blocked from receiving federal financial aid. The drug provision was
    slipped into the 257-page HEA reauthorization bill without debate or a
    recorded vote.

    After organizing campus chapters across the country, and years of
    lobbying, a bill is on it’s way to the President that sharply limits
    the drug conviction provision. Instead of applying to all past
    convictions, the law will, as the USA TODAY article says, change the
    standards: “But students convicted of a drug felony or misdemeanor in
    college will still be disqualified from receiving federal aid for at
    least one year.”

    This is only a partial victory. Students who are convicted of other
    serious felonies or misdemeanors have always been eligible for federal
    financial aid. And students with the financial ability to attend
    college without federal financial aid are not punished by the HEA provisions.

    Letters to the Editor now can help move this issue forward. Your local
    newspapers are good targets. So are your local college or university
    newspapers.

    Newspaper contacts for LTEs may be found by using the MAP media page
    at http://www.mapinc.org/media.htm Use the “List by Area” dropdown to
    select a state. Look for Edu following the newspaper title to identify
    college papers.

    If possible, try working a link to SSDP into your letters. The shorter
    URL http://www.ssdp.org/ may find print more easily.

    For college papers, it never hurts to add a tie, if you have one, to
    the college after your signature block. Tell the paper if you are a
    former student, or if you have a friend or relative attending, for
    example.

    As the sidebar in the USA TODAY article says, many states or specific
    institutions of higher education also limit state and other financial
    aid based on drug convictions. Addressing these issues in your letters
    will be helpful as few are even aware of these additional limits on
    financial aid. Please see the Coalition for Higher Education Act
    Reform website http://www.raiseyourvoice.com/ for more
    information.

    Other LTE targets may be found at http://www.mapinc.org/hea.htm

    Thanks for your effort and support.

    It’s not what others do — It’s what YOU do

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

    Additional suggestions for writing LTEs are at our Media Activism Center:

    http://www.mapinc.org/resource/#guides

    Or contact MAP Media Activism Facilitator Steve Heath for personal
    tips on how to write LTEs that get printed.

    [email protected]

    You are welcome to join Steve and other LTE writing friends of MAP
    every Tuesday and Thursday evening at 9 p.m. Eastern, 8 p.m. Central,
    7 p.m. Mountain and 6 p.m. Pacific time for a roundtable discussion of
    how to write LTEs that are printed.

    See: http://mapinc.org/resource/paltalk.htm for details on how you
    can participate in this important meeting of leading minds in
    reform. Discussion is conducted with live Voice (microphone and
    speakers all that is needed) and also via text messaging.
    The Paltalk software is free and easy to download and install.

    The password for these gatherings is: welcome-pal (all lower
    case)

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

    PLEASE SEND US COPIES OF YOUR LETTERS

    Please post a copy of your letter or report your action to the sent
    letter list ([email protected]) if you are subscribed, or by
    E-mailing a copy directly to [email protected] if you are not
    subscribed. Your letter will then be forwarded to the list so others
    can learn from your efforts.

    Subscribing to the Sent LTE list ([email protected]) will help you to
    review other sent LTEs and perhaps come up with new ideas or
    approaches as well as keeping others aware of your important writing
    efforts.

    To subscribe to the Sent LTE mailing list see

    http://www.mapinc.org/lists/index.htm#form

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

    Prepared by: Richard Lake, Sr. Editor, www.drugnews.org =.

  • Focus Alerts

    #322 Steve Kubby Is In The Placer County Jail

    Date: Sat, 28 Jan 2006
    Subject: #322 Steve Kubby Is In The Placer County Jail

    STEVE KUBBY IS IN THE PLACER COUNTY JAIL

    *********************PLEASE COPY AND DISTRIBUTE*************************

    DrugSense FOCUS Alert #322 – Saturday, 28 January 2006

    Name: Kubby, Steven Wynn

    Age/Gender: 59/Male

    Jail ID/Booking No: P00049899/0601064#

    Facility/Floor: PC/N

    Book Date: 1/27/2006 14:41

    Arresting Agency: Placer County Sheriffs Department

    Custody Status: In Custody

    Authority: Charge(s): Bail:

    Bench Warrant 1. 11377 (A)HS Possess Controlled Substance

    Total Bail: 0

    With the above data from http://www.placer.ca.gov/sheriff/jail/jailreports/incustody_BN.htm
    we now know Steve Kubby’s current status.

    His friends and supporters are asking us to contact the
    following:

    Bradford R. Fenocchio, Placer County District Attorney

    Phone: (530) 889-7000

    Fax: (530) 889-7129

    Email: [email protected]

    Note: Deputy DA Christopher Cattran may be contacted at the above phone number.

    —–

    Sheriff Edward N. Bonner (who has ultimate responsibility for the
    jail)

    Phone: 530-889-7800

    Fax: 530-889-6883

    Email: [email protected]

    You may also make complaints via this web form:

    http://www.placer.ca.gov/sheriff/save/commend/complaint.htm

    —–

    Additionally, contacting the county’s Board of Supervisors could be
    helpful.

    See: http://www.placer.ca.gov/bos/bos.htm

    —–

    We ask that your keep your messages to the point and be respectful.
    The goal is to insure that Steve remains in good health, and that the
    County is aware of it’s responsibilities under the law.

    Please keep a record of your contacts. While we pray it will not
    happen, you may thus be able to provide evidence in a wrongful death
    suit.

    Good news: After much pain & anguish Attorney Bill McPike reports that
    Steve Kubby is to receive Marinol in the Placer County Jail! He is
    currently being housed in the infirmary.

    He is scheduled to be arraigned at 1 p.m. in Dept. 13 of Placer County
    Superior Court, 11532 B Avenue, Auburn, California, Tuesday.

    This hearing is going to be an arraignment hearing on his misdemeanor
    violation of probation. Bill McPike, Steve’s attorney, has indicated
    that Cattran, the prosecutor, will probably ask for more time.

    Here’s how to contribute to Steve’s commissary:

    Anybody can put money on Steve’s books for commissary & health items.
    These must be a US postal money order.

    No letters may accompany the money orders. Letters of support may be
    sent to the same address.

    MOs should be made out to Steve Kubby.

    Steve Kubby

    BK 49899

    c/o Placer Co Jail

    2775 Richardson Drive

    Auburn, CA 95603

    While many organizations have providing information about what has
    happened to Steve since Wednesday, the Friday evening blog by Ann
    Harrison http://www.cannabisreport.com/blog/archives/2006/01/sf_sup_investig.php
    is informative.

    For more background information, please see http://www.kubby.com

    It is also important to write Letters to the Editor in support of
    Steve — many targets may be found at http://www.mapinc.org/kubby.htm

    Letters to Placer County’s newspaper, the Auburn Journal
    http://www.auburnjournal.com/ sent to [email protected]
    will help insure that the local public receives the whole story.

    Thanks for your effort and support.

    It’s not what others do — It’s what YOU do

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

    Prepared by: The Media Awareness Project of DrugSense =.

  • Focus Alerts

    #321 Will Steve Kubby Become A Medical Cannabis Martyr?

    Date: Sat, 21 Jan 2006
    Subject: #321 Will Steve Kubby Become A Medical Cannabis Martyr?

    WILL STEVE KUBBY BECOME A MEDICAL CANNABIS MARTYR?

    *********************PLEASE COPY AND DISTRIBUTE*************************

    DrugSense FOCUS Alert #321 – Saturday, 21 January 2006

    Today two large newspapers published articles about Steve
    Kubby.

    The Los Angeles Times article, titled ‘Medical Pot Advocate Loses Bid
    To Bar Deportation From Canada’ is at http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v06/n089/a01.html

    And one of Canada’s national newspapers, the Globe and Mail, published
    an article titled ‘Marijuana Activist May Be Deported to U.S. – Return
    Could Mean Death, Wife Says’ which is at http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v06/n089/a05.html

    The Globe and Mail article says “Judge Pinard, who was a federal
    cabinet minister under Pierre Trudeau, said it “remains speculative”
    that Mr. Kubby will be jailed in the United States, or that he will
    be denied adequate medical care.”

    Remains Speculative? So the Canadian government is willing to take a
    chance that just maybe Steve Kubby will live when jailed at the
    border, while being transported to California, and then jailed —
    despite all the facts that indicate otherwise?

    The Globe and Mail article also states “A senior official at the
    Placer County jail said that Mr. Kubby could not have marijuana in
    custody. He could be prescribed Marinol, a synthetic form of THC, the
    official said.” but goes on to Mr. Kubby’s response “He explained that
    Marinol is not effective in coping with his cancer, and stressed that,
    apart from his health concerns, “the problem is that no one wants to
    admit this is political.” ”

    So there we have it, Placer County officials still today are willing
    to play doctor with Steve Kubby’s life – in violation of their oaths
    of office and the constitution of the state which makes clear that
    they must follow California law, even in jails. Synthetic THC is only
    one of the medically active ingredients in cannabis – Steve Kubby must
    have other cannabinoids found in cannabis to live!

    While it is important to write Letters to the Editor in support of
    Steve — many targets may be found at http://www.mapinc.org/kubby.htm
    — we also encourage you to Please contact the Canadian Ministers who
    can stop the deportation. Please go to Steve’s website for contact
    instructions:

    http://www.kubby.org/

    Thanks for your effort and support.

    It’s not what others do — It’s what YOU do

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

    Prepared by: The Media Awareness Project of DrugSense =.

  • Focus Alerts

    #320 New York Times On Failed Drug Policies

    Date: Fri, 13 Jan 2006
    Subject: #320 New York Times On Failed Drug Policies

    NEW YORK TIMES ON FAILED DRUG POLICIES

    *********************PLEASE COPY AND DISTRIBUTE*************************

    DrugSense FOCUS Alert #320 – Friday, 13 January 2006

    This week, The New York Times has printed three good
    items.

    ON Tuesday, Jan 10 they carried an OPED written by Leslie Crocker
    Snyder, a former New York State judge. She states that New York state
    needs to further reform the infamous 1975 “Rockefeller” drug laws.

    ALSO on Tuesday in the Times Health Section, personal health
    columnist Jane E.. Brody takes on the Drug Enforcement
    Administration’s jihad against doctors who try to treat chronic,
    debilitating pain in their patients.

    ON Thursday, Jan 12 the Times editorial board gives a harsh critique
    about the effects of two decades of ever-escalating mandatory minimum
    sentencing for drug offenses.

    Please consider writing at least one Letter to the Editor to the
    editors of The New York Times with your personal comments on one or
    each of the articles.

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

    The three articles can be seen by going to these MAP URLs:

    US NY: OPED: Reform The Reforms

    http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v06/n029/a03.html

    US NY: Column: Let’s Get Serious About Relieving Chronic Pain

    http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v06/n037/a09.html

    US NY: Editorial: Drugs and Racial Discrimination

    http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v06/n050/a03.html

    Letters to the New York Times should not exceed 150
    words.

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

    Thanks for your effort and support.

    It’s not what others do — It’s what YOU do

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

    Additional suggestions for writing LTEs are at our Media Activism Center:

    http://www.mapinc.org/resource/#guides

    Or contact MAP Media Activism Facilitator Steve Heath for personal
    tips on how to write LTEs that get printed.

    [email protected]

    You are welcome to join Steve and other LTE writing friends of MAP
    every Tuesday and Thursday evening at 9 p.m. Eastern, 8 p.m.
    Central, 7 p.m. Mountain and 6 p.m. Pacific time for a roundtable
    discussion of how to write LTEs that are printed.

    See: http://mapinc.org/resource/paltalk.htm for details on how you
    can participate in this important meeting of leading minds in
    reform. Discussion is conducted with live Voice (microphone and
    speakers all that is needed) and also via text messaging.
    The Paltalk software is free and easy to download and install.

    The password for these gatherings is

    PW: welcome-pal (all lower case)

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

    PLEASE SEND US A COPY OF YOUR LETTER

    Please post a copy of your letter or report your action to the sent
    letter list ([email protected]) if you are subscribed, or by
    E-mailing a copy directly to [email protected] if you are not
    subscribed. Your letter will then be forwarded to the list so others
    can learn from your efforts.

    Subscribing to the Sent LTE list ([email protected]) will help you to
    review other sent LTEs and perhaps come up with new ideas or
    approaches as well as keeping others aware of your important writing
    efforts.

    To subscribe to the Sent LTE mailing list see

    http://www.mapinc.org/lists/index.htm#form

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

    Prepared by: Stephen Heath, MAP Media Activism Facilitator =.

  • Focus Alerts

    #319 2005 – The Year In Review

    Date: Mon, 2 Jan 2006
    Subject: #319 2005 – The Year In Review

    2005 – THE YEAR IN REVIEW

    *********************PLEASE COPY AND DISTRIBUTE*************************

    DrugSense FOCUS Alert #319 – Monday, 2 January 2006

    As we enter a new year, the staff and supporters of DrugSense and MAP
    thank the many friends and community activists who have used our
    resources during 2005. Together, we have successfully made the print,
    radio and television media more aware of both the failures in public
    drug policy and of alternatives to status-quo drug war strategies.

    Here are links to the most read news clippings for
    2005:

    Australasia http://www.mapinc.org/find?369

    Canada: http://www.mapinc.org/find?366

    South America http://www.mapinc.org/find?368

    United Kingdom http://www.mapinc.org/find?367

    United States http://www.mapinc.org/find?365

    2005 saw DrugSense and it’s Media Awareness Project grow in many
    ways:

    January saw the launch of our Media Activism Facilitator Project
    http://www.mapinc.org/resource/ with a goal of providing more
    assistance and training for local activists in topics like How To Get
    Drug Policy On the Air in Your Community, How to write a Press
    Release, Preparing For TV and Radio Interviews, and how to write OPEDs
    and Letters to the Editor for publication. Using the MAP Virtual
    Conference Room http://www.mapinc.org/resource/paltalk.htm numerous
    voice/text training sessions were completed. Current training session
    dates and times are found at http://www.mapinc.org/resource/pal_sched.php
    As a part of the project, The Drug Policy Writers Group
    http://mapinc.org/resource/dpwg/index.php was formed in the Fall to
    help folks who wish to write OPEDs market them to newspapers.

    As many drug policy reform activists are discovering, the highest and
    most direct level of democracy often takes place at the lowest levels
    of government. This is reflected in the many successful municipal
    audits and initiatives that have taken place over the last few years.
    From Seattle’s I-75, to Oakland’s Measure Z, to Syracuse’s Plan B,
    these important local actions can expose and erode the faulty
    presumptions that underpin the war on drugs, and they often resonate
    well beyond their geographical boundaries. Although each municipality
    has a different social and bureaucratic make-up, we believe that
    future initiatives can benefit from reviewing the tactics of those
    that have successfully passed before them. It is with this in mind
    that DrugSense developed during the Summer the “Community Audits and
    Initiatives” webpages http://www.drugsense.org/caip

    The Robert C. Randall Award for Achievement in the Field of Citizen
    Action was awarded to DrugSense in November. See the award and listen
    to audio excerpts of Mark Greer’s and Matt Elrod’s acceptance speech
    at http://drugsense.org/awards/randall.htm

    At the year’s end Drug Policy Central, the web design, hosting and
    internet services wing of DrugSense http://www.drugpolicycentral.com
    was hosting 122 websites and numerous email lists and threaded
    discussion forums for the drug policy reform community worldwide.

    The DrugSense http://www.drugsense.org website continued to grow, but
    perhaps the best kept secret in reform is what is available to users
    that actually register at the website. Many pages do not require
    registration. For those who do register, for free – over 2,300 by the
    end of 2005 – access is provided to audio-visual clips, blogs,
    downloads, forums, music and other content not available to those who
    do not register.

    MAP’s Published Letters Archive http://www.mapinc.org/lte/ saw almost
    a 25% increase in pro-reform published letters in 1995, despite war,
    floods, famine and a wide variety of national and local issues that
    tended to push our issues off of the editorial pages of newspapers.

    Our 10th anniversary occurred in November, when, ten years earlier,
    Mark Greer founded this ground breaking organization
    http://www.drugsense.org/pages/history We will be celebrating this
    milestone throughout 2006.

    Not mentioned above are a variety of other services to the reform
    community, like our DrugSense Weekly, our 25,000 listings media
    contact database, and our news clipping feeds to over two hundred
    websites worldwide.

    All of the above was supported by generous donations and grants from
    the reform community. But with all the calls to give from various
    other good causes, fund raising is difficult. If we are to survive
    through this year financial support from users like you must increase.

    Due to the generosity of a long time DrugSense funder, we have secured
    a matching funds grant! This means that anything you contribute to
    DrugSense and the Media Awareness Project will be matched, thus
    doubling the effective amount of your contribution. Please, please,
    visit our donations page http://www.drugsense.org/donate.htm and give!

    “It’s not what others do, it’s what YOU do!”

    **********************************************************************
    Prepared by: Staff http://www.drugsense.org/pages/whoweare =.

  • Focus Alerts

    #318 Another Call For Drug Legalization

    Date: Mon, 05 Dec 2005
    Subject: #318 Another Call For Drug Legalization

    ANOTHER CALL FOR DRUG LEGALIZATION

    *********************PLEASE COPY AND DISTRIBUTE*************************

    DrugSense FOCUS Alert #318 – Monday, 5 December 2005

    On Sunday, Dec. 4th the Seattle Times picked up an OPED written by
    former Seattle police chief Norm Stamper in which he makes a firm
    declaration that we need to end our current policy of drug
    prohibition. His suggestion? Replace prohibition with a legal,
    regulated distribution system for all in-demand drugs.

    Stamper’s opinions mirror those of Law Enforcement Against Prohibition
    http://leap.cc , the international group of police, judges and others
    with long experience fighting the drug war who believe that drug
    prohibition should be replaced with legal regulation.

    Please consider writing a short, succinct Letter to the Editor of the
    Seattle Times letting them know of your support for Stamper and for
    his position on ending drug prohibition.

    In Addition, you can help us get this important OPED placed into other
    newspapers. See below for details.

    Thanks for your effort and support.

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

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

    The Seattle Times OPED can be seen here:

    US WA: OPED: Legalize Drugs — All of Them

    URL: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v05/n1901/a05.html

    Contact: [email protected]

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

    Additional suggestions for writing LTEs are at our Media Activism Center:

    http://www.mapinc.org/resource/

    You are welcome to join MAP Media Activism Facilitator Steve Heath and
    other LTE writing friends of MAP this Thursday evening, Dec. 8th at 9
    pm EST (8 pm CST, 6 pm PST) for a roundtable discussion of how to
    write LTEs that get print and how to best respond to this Focus Alert.

    See: http://mapinc.org/resource/paltalk.htm for details on how you
    may participate in this important meeting of leading minds in
    reform. Discussion is conducted with live Voice (microphone and
    speakers are all that is needed) and also via text messaging.
    The Paltalk software is free and easy to download and install.

    The password for this gathering will be: welcome-pal (all lower
    case)

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

    HELP US get this and other important drug policy reform-minded OPEDs
    into print in other newspapers across North America.

    Contact Steve Heath at [email protected] for details of how to work
    with us in our Drug Policy Writers Group project.

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

    PLEASE SEND US A COPY OF YOUR LETTER

    Please post a copy of your letter or report your action to the sent
    letter list ([email protected]) if you are subscribed, or by
    E-mailing a copy directly to [email protected] if you are not
    subscribed. Your letter will then be forwarded to the list so others
    can learn from your efforts.

    Subscribing to the Sent LTE list ([email protected]) will help you to
    review other sent LTEs and perhaps come up with new ideas or
    approaches as well as keeping others aware of your important writing
    efforts.

    To subscribe to the Sent LTE mailing list see

    http://www.mapinc.org/lists/index.htm#form

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

    Prepared by: Stephen Heath, MAP Media Activism Facilitator =.

  • Focus Alerts

    #317 Tell Congress To Stop War On Hurricane Victims

    Date: Thu, 27 Oct 2005
    Subject: #317 Tell Congress To Stop War On Hurricane Victims

    TELL CONGRESS TO STOP WAR ON HURRICANE VICTIMS

    *********************PLEASE COPY AND DISTRIBUTE*************************

    DrugSense FOCUS Alert #317 – Thursday, 27 Sep 2005

    The following was provided by the Drug Policy Alliance

    Homepage

    It has been endorsed by Common Sense for Drug Policy
    http://www.csdp.org , Drug Reform Coordination Network
    http://stopthedrugwar.org , Harm Reduction Coalition
    http://www.harmreduction.org , Human Rights and the Drug War
    http://www.hr95.org , National Alliance of Methadone Advocates
    http://www.methadone.org, The Sentencing Project http://www.sentencingproject.org
    , Students for Sensible Drug Policy http://www.daregeneration.com ,
    and nearly a hundred other groups.

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

    We Need Your Help to Stop the War on Drugs From Becoming a War on
    Hurricane Victims.

    Nearly three million people have been displaced from their homes
    because of Hurricanes Katrina and Rita. Many have lost everything. Yet
    federal laws prohibit these victims from receiving welfare, food
    stamps, public housing, student loans and other benefits if they have
    a drug law conviction. People who have lost everything should not be
    denied public assistance just because they were convicted of a drug
    offense sometime in their past.

    The Alliance held a press conference today with Congressman Bobby
    Scott (D-VA), ranking member of the House Crime Subcommittee, and
    Congresswoman Sheila Jackson Lee (D-TX), ranking member of the House
    Immigration Subcommittee, to announce the introduction of the
    “Elimination of Barriers for Katrina Victims Act,” which would
    temporarily suspend federal laws that deny public assistance to
    hurricane victims who have drug offenses in their past. If the bill is
    enacted, thousands of destitute families that would otherwise be
    denied food stamps, public housing and other aid because of prior drug
    offenses would be able to obtain benefits to help put their lives back
    together.

    Fax Congress in support of this important bill: http://actioncenter.drugpolicy.org/ctt.asp?u=1876&l=109090
    .

    In addition to holding a press conference, the Alliance released a
    statement in support of the bill ( http://actioncenter.drugpolicy.org/ctt.asp?u=1876&l=109132
    ) signed by almost 100 state and national drug treatment, civil
    rights, and public health groups.

    We would like to thank Joyce Ann Brown, president and CEO of Mothers
    (Fathers) for the Advancement of Social Systems (MASS), and Lorenzo
    Ford, a MASS case worker, for traveling all the way from Texas to
    speak at our press conference. We would like to especially thank
    Antoinette Samson for coming to DC to speak. Her family was evacuated
    from New Orleans, where they lost everything, and her courage in the
    face of adversity is amazing.

    Introduced by Congressman Bobby Scott (D-VA), the “Elimination of
    Barriers for Katrina Victims Act” is co-sponsored by Rep. John Conyers
    (D-MI), Rep. Barney Frank (D-MA), Rep. William Jefferson (D-LA), Rep.
    Eddie Bernice Johnson (D-TX), Rep. Barbara Lee (D-CA), Rep. Sheila
    Jackson Lee (D-TX), Rep. Ron Paul (R-TX), Rep. Charles Rangel (D-NY),
    and Rep. Bennie Thompson (D-MS). Since the bill was just introduced,
    it does not have a bill number yet.

    Now we need you to speak up. Fax your U.S Representative today
    http://actioncenter.drugpolicy.org/ctt.asp?u=1876&l=109090

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

    After you have contacted your U.S Representative, please write a
    letter on this issue to your local newspaper. The problems of
    hurricane victims is daily news now, but few are aware of this issue.
    Your letters will help bring the issue to the public.

    To see a listing of the newspapers from your state and their contact
    information, go to http://www.mapinc.org/media.htm, use the dropdown
    menu to select your state and then select CONTACT.

    Thanks for your effort and support.

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

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

    Additional suggestions for writing LTEs are at our Media Activism Center:

    http://www.mapinc.org/resource/

    Or contact MAP Media Activism Facilitator Steve Heath for personal
    tips on how to write LTEs that get printed.

    [email protected]

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

    PLEASE SEND US A COPY OF YOUR LETTER

    Please post a copy of your letter or report your action to the sent
    letter list ([email protected]) if you are subscribed, or by
    E-mailing a copy directly to [email protected] if you are not
    subscribed. Your letter will then be forwarded to the list so others
    can learn from your efforts.

    Subscribing to the Sent LTE list ([email protected]) will help you to
    review other sent LTEs and perhaps come up with new ideas or
    approaches as well as keeping others aware of your important writing
    efforts.

    To subscribe to the Sent LTE mailing list see

    http://www.mapinc.org/lists/index.htm#form

    **********************************************************************
    Prepared by: Stephen Heath, MAP Media Activism Facilitator =.

  • Focus Alerts

    #316 Medical Marijuana Does Not Increase Teen Use

    Date: Sat, 10 Sep 2005
    Subject: #316 Medical Marijuana Does Not Increase Teen Use

    MEDICAL MARIJUANA DOES NOT INCREASE TEEN USE

    *********************PLEASE COPY AND DISTRIBUTE*************************

    DrugSense FOCUS Alert #316 – Saturday, 10 Sep 2005

    The Wed, Sep 7 edition of the Los Angeles Times carried some great
    news. An almost decade-old Prohibitionist bogeyman – “Allowing adults
    legal access to medical marijuana will cause teenage use of pot to
    skyrocket” – has been demonstrated as just so much claptrap.

    The study is based on data from national and state surveys, which show
    a drop in marijuana use by teens.

    Although debate over medical marijuana is often shaded by concerns
    about increasing drug abuse among young people, the report suggested
    the opposite has been true.

    The study’s authors were Mitch Earleywine, a State University of New
    York psychology professor, and Karen O’Keefe, a legislative analyst
    with Marijuana Policy Project, the organization that commissioned the
    research based on state and federal data.

    That data “strongly suggests” that approval of medical marijuana has
    not increased recreational use of cannabis among adolescents,
    Earleywine and O’Keefe concluded. And the decline in many of the
    states with medical marijuana laws is “slightly more favorable” than
    trends nationwide, they said.

    The MPP study is on line here:

    http://www.mpp.org/teens.html

    Please consider contacting your local and state newspapers and asking
    them to carry this important story.

    Many newspapers have picked up the short news blurb, via the
    Associated Press, which announced the overall national drop in teenage
    marijuana use. But they’re not likely to carry the related and
    frankly more important story about this study, unless their local
    readers ask them to do so.

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

    The LA Times article by Eric Bailey can be seen here:

    US: Pot Use Down Where Medical Use OK

    URL: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v05/n1446/a06.html

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

    To see a listing of the newspapers from your state and their contact
    information, go to http://www.mapinc.org/media.htm, use the dropdown
    menu to select your state and then select CONTACT.

    Thanks for your effort and support.

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

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

    Additional suggestions for writing LTEs are at our Media Activism Center:

    http://www.mapinc.org/resource/

    Or contact MAP Media Activism Facilitator Steve Heath for personal
    tips on how to write LTEs that get printed.

    [email protected]

    And of course, you are welcome to join Steve and other LTE writing
    friends of MAP this Sunday evening, Sep. 11th at 9pm EDT for a
    roundtable discussion of how to write LTEs that get print and
    specifically how to best respond to this Focus Alert. We’ll also be
    talking about LTEs directed at Opinion items concerning the Raich
    decision from the Supreme Court.

    See: http://mapinc.org/resource/paltalk.htm for all details on how
    you can participate in this important meeting of leading minds in
    reform. Discussion is conducted with live Voice (microphone and
    speakers all that is needed) and also via text messaging.
    The Paltalk software is free and easy to download and install.

    The password for this gathering will be PW: welcome-pal (all lower
    case)

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

    PLEASE SEND US A COPY OF YOUR LETTER

    Please post a copy of your letter or report your action to the sent
    letter list ([email protected]) if you are subscribed, or by
    E-mailing a copy directly to [email protected] if you are not
    subscribed. Your letter will then be forwarded to the list so others
    can learn from your efforts.

    Subscribing to the Sent LTE list ([email protected]) will help you to
    review other sent LTEs and perhaps come up with new ideas or
    approaches as well as keeping others aware of your important writing
    efforts.

    To subscribe to the Sent LTE mailing list see

    http://www.mapinc.org/lists/index.htm#form

    **********************************************************************
    Prepared by: Stephen Heath, MAP Media Activism Facilitator =.