420 Use and Health

Collapse
X
 
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Crow
    replied
    I'm not sure if you're still lurking on this board; but this one is for you, Patients Against I-502

    -------------

    NORML’s Official Reply To ‘Patients Against I-502’

    by Allen St. Pierre, NORML Executive Director

    NORML supports (and publicly endorses when requested by the principal organizers) marijuana legalization, regulation, and medical use initiatives that qualify for the state ballot, so long as they move us closer to full legalization, even if they contain provisions we do not believe should be included in a perfect proposal.

    Every cannabis law reform initiative dating back to the 1972 proposal in CA has included some flaws, but nonetheless when the initiatives have been approved, marijuana consumers, (including those who use cannabis for medical reasons) benefit by legal protections that did not exist under prior law.

    When any marijuana law reform initiative qualifies for the ballot, it instantly creates a much needed public policy discussion and debate about the need to end cannabis prohibition. The mainstream media, editorial boards, columnists and radio talk shows FINALLY start to focus on the problems created by 74 years of prohibition and the benefits of alternative public policies.

    The value of this public discussion, even if the initiative loses, clearly moves us closer to eventual victory. For example, Prop. 19 in CA, which ended up getting nearly 47% of the vote, sparked a national debate over the merits of legalization that helped move the support for full legalization to the highest point ever, measured by a recent Gallup poll as 50% support nationwide.

    At NORML, we support these efforts, even when imperfect, because the greater good achieved by legalization proposals outweighs the imperfect language; and what flaws exist in individual initiatives can be amended in future legislation (or if necessary, via another voter initiative). But in the meantime, tens of thousands of marijuana arrests are avoided by the new law.

    We fully recognize the per se DUI marijuana provisions in I-502 are arbitrary, unnecessary, and unscientific, and we argued strongly with the sponsors for provisions that would require proof of actual impairment to be shown before one could be charged with a traffic safety offense. NORML, arguably more so than any other drug law reform organization, has a long track record of opposing the imposition of arbitrary and discriminatory per se traffic safety laws for responsible cannabis consumers. But we failed to persuade the sponsors of I-502, and now we must decide whether to support the initiative despite those provisions. We believe the overall impact of this proposal, if approved by voters this fall and enacted, will be overwhelmingly helpful to the vast majority of cannabis consumers in the state, and will eliminate tens of thousands of cannabis arrests each year. Thus, NORML’s Board of Directors voted unanimously (including the two members from WA) to endorse the initiative, while maintaining our opposition to per se DUID provisions in principal.

    Additionally, at NORML we also support the right of consumers to grow their own marijuana, and there is no such legal protection in the WA initiative. However, qualified patients already protected under existing law will be able to continue to grow cannabis, as I-502 does not alter existing medicinal cannabis laws. The sponsors found through their polling that the inclusion of the right to cultivate marijuana for personal adult use would reduce their level of public support below that needed for approval. Again, while we continue to support personal cultivation, we believe the initiative still deserves our support, despite this calculated omission by I-502’s sponsors.

    We would urge those who support marijuana legalization, but oppose specific provision of I-502, to nonetheless support this initiative because of the importance of 1.) having one state actually approve legalization and confront the federal government on this issue, and 2.) stopping thousands of expensive and damaging arrests, prosecutions and incarcerations annually in WA for cannabis-related offenses, notably for simple possession.

    For those who feel they cannot support the current initiative, because it is not perfect, we would hope they would step aside and take no public position, in order not to undermine what is an historic opportunity to end marijuana prohibition, by popular vote, under state law.
    http://blog.norml.org/2012/02/24/nor...against-i-502/

    -------------

    Washington (US)

    New Poll Shows 47% of Likely Voters Support I-502, 15% Undecided

    A new survey of likely Washington state voters by Public Policy Polling shows 47% percent support I-502, an initiative to legalize and regulate marijuana for adult use. Only 39% of respondents were opposed and 15% remained undecided.


    New Approach Washington, the group backing the initiative, turned in about 278,000 valid signatures at the end of January, a little over 20,000 more than required to qualify for the ballot. Since the legislature has declined action on the initiative, it will almost certainly go before voters in Washington this November.

    For more information and updates on I-502, visit New Approach Washington’s website here.

    You can view the full poll from PPP by clicking here.

    -------------

    Leave a comment:


  • Crow
    replied
    Washington (US)

    State of the City Address -- Seattle Mayor Mike McGinn: Legalize marijuana so we can stop crime



    "I know every one of the city council members sitting to my left and right believe as I do: it’s time for this state to legalize marijuana,' Seattle Mayor Mike McGinn said in his State of the City address. City of Seattle"

    In his “State of the City” address, Seattle Mayor Mike McGinn made an impassioned plea today for the legalization of marijuana saying in the illegal trade in drugs was fueling crime in the city.
    “It is time we were honest about the problems we face with the drug trade. Drugs are a source of criminal profit, and that has led to shootings and even murders. Just like we learned in the 1920s with the prohibition of alcohol, prohibition of marijuana is fueling violent activity,” the mayor said in the written version of his speech.
    He added that the war on drugs “fuels a biased incarceration policy. The drug war’s victims are predominantly young men of color.”

    In a speech that covered the decline and recovery from the recession and the pressure funding cuts have put on city services and workers, the mayor’s focus on crime in the streets brought out the most reaction, according to the Seattle Times.
    From his speech:

    “Seattle is the kind of place that isn’t afraid to try a different approach. We support safe access to medical marijuana and made enforcement of possession of marijuana for personal purposes our lowest enforcement priority. But we’ve learned in the past year that with the federal war on drugs still intact, and with our kids still getting gunned down on the streets, we need to do more.

    “I know every one of the city council members sitting to my left and right believe as I do: it’s time for this state to legalize marijuana, and stop the violence, stop the incarceration, stop the erosion of civil liberties, and urge the federal government to stop the failed war on drugs.”
    Article continued at: http://www.kplu.org/post/seattle-may...can-stop-crime

    Leave a comment:


  • Crow
    replied
    United States

    Dozens Of States Are Considering Marijuana Law Reform This Legislative Session; Is Your State One Of Them?

    by Paul Armentano, NORML Deputy Director

    Marijuana law reform legislation is pending in nearly 30 states this 2012 legislative session. Is your state among them? Find out here.

    More importantly, have you taken the time to call or write your state elected officials this year and urged them to support these pending reforms? If not, NORML has provided you with all of the tools to do so via our capwiz ‘Take Action Center’ here. (FYI: NORML’s capwiz page is specific to legislation only, not ballot initiative efforts. A summary pending 2012 ballot initiative campaigns may be found at NORML’s Legalize It 2012 page on Facebook here or on the NORML blog here.)

    Below is a synopsis of statewide legislation pending in 2012. Detailed information on bill numbers, hearing dates, and how you can get involved to support these efforts is available here.

    MEDICINAL MARIJUANA

    The following 20 states have legislation pending to enact limited legal protections for medicinal cannabis users and/or to improve existing medical marijuana laws:

    Alabama, Connecticut, Florida, Hawaii, Iowa, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, Kentucky, Maryland, Massachusetts, Mississippi, Missouri, North Carolina, Ohio, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Wisconsin, West Virginia

    DECRIMINALIZATION

    The following states have legislation pending to reduce marijuana possession penalties to a non-criminal offense:

    Arizona, Hawaii, Indiana, North Carolina, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Rhode Island, Vermont

    REGULATION

    Legislation that seeks to legalize and regulate the commercial production and distribution of cannabis to adults is before lawmakers in New Hampshire and Massachusetts. Legislators in Massachusetts have scheduled a public hearing on this measure, HB 1371, to take place on Tuesday, March 6.

    (Also of note, legislation that NORML opposes is pending in Colorado and Florida.)

    If your state isn’t listed above then please consider using NORML’s ‘Take Action Center’ to send a message to your members of Congress in support of HR 2306, the ‘Ending Federal Marijuana Prohibition Act.’ You can do so here. Then consider taking the next step and contacting your state elected officials and urging them to take action.
    Get active; get NORML!

    Leave a comment:


  • GODOFSNUS
    replied
    Dope!!!!!!!!!!!!

    Leave a comment:


  • Joe234
    replied
    American Weed -- National Geographic Channel-ALL-NEW SERIES,WED 10P et/pt

    American Weed -- National Geographic Channel-ALL-NEW SERIES,WED 10P et/pt

    http://channel.nationalgeographic.co...american-weed/


    Leave a comment:


  • Crow
    replied
    As he was running from Cartwright's house on Carmen Avenue near Holly Hill on Feb. 10 just after 7 a.m., the teen even yelled at Cartwright, "See, I have one of your pot plants!" the arrest report states.

    When Cartwright yelled, "Hey!" the suspect jumped back and bolted, the potted tomato plant in hand.
    "I chased him and I yelled out, "You stupid little brat, it's a tomato plant!" Cartwright said Thursday.
    That made my day.

    Leave a comment:


  • Crow
    replied
    Originally posted by BadAxe
    So if it ever becomes legal in states, what does that do for drug testing for jobs? Will they still test for MJ and deny the job if found positive? Or will they have to remove MJ things they look for? I mean, we all know that MJ stays in your system a lot longer than alcohol or any other drug. So I wonder what happens in employment drug testing in states where it becomes legal. What do you guys think?
    Well, as it stands now for medical patients, it's at the discretion of your employer (meaning they are legally allowed to terminate your employment).

    If cannabis is legalised for all adults, then the issue will need to be re-visited. If the employer suspects that one of its employees is under the influence, they could use a modified saliva test that detects usage up to a few hours. Otherwise, it will need to be determined by the courts (or legislation) when the time arises.

    Leave a comment:


  • wa3zrm
    replied
    Deputies: Teen After Pot Steals Tomato Plant Instead Near Holly Hill
    The Daytona Beach News-Journal ^ |Call it a case of mistaken plant identity.
    A 15-year-old boy climbed into Angela Cartwright's kitchen window thinking to make off with a marijuana plant, but instead the young thief was actually stealing a potted tomato plant, a sheriff's arrest report shows.
    As he was running from Cartwright's house on Carmen Avenue near Holly Hill on Feb. 10 just after 7 a.m., the teen even yelled at Cartwright, "See, I have one of your pot plants!" the arrest report states.
    Cartwright had arrived at her residence that morning after leaving her 6-year-old son off at the school bus stop. When she walked into her home she saw a teenager whose torso was inside her kitchen window and the other half of his body was hanging outside, the report shows.
    When Cartwright yelled, "Hey!" the suspect jumped back and bolted, the potted tomato plant in hand.
    "I chased him and I yelled out, "You stupid little brat, it's a tomato plant!" Cartwright said Thursday.
    The teen gave Cartwright the slip, but Wednesday morning as Cartwright and a friend walked Cartwright's son to the bus stop, they spotted the teenager a second time, the report shows.
    The boy was wearing the same clothes Cartwright had seen on him five days earlier, she said.
    "I said to my friend, 'That's him,' " Cartwright said. "It looked like he was going to hide from me, but then he stayed there."
    According to the report and Cartwright, the boy, who The Daytona Beach News-Journal is not identifying because of his age, admitted to stealing the tomato plant, valued at under $5.
    "He seemed like a nice kid," Cartwright said. "It almost seemed as if he wanted to get caught."
    While Cartwright, her friend and the teen waited for a deputy to arrive at the bus stop, the 35-year-old mother took the opportunity to give a lecture.
    "I gave him the 'mother lecture,' " Cartwright said. "He listened and I told him he should be in school."
    The teen was charged with unarmed burglary of an occupied dwelling, his first offense, the report states.
    When interviewed, the young suspect told a lawman the same thing -- he broke into Cartwright's house thinking he was getting away with a marijuana plant, the report shows.
    "It wasn't pot, it was just Walmart tomatoes," Cartwright said with a laugh.
    The teen was taken to the Volusia Regional Juvenile Detention Center in Daytona Beach.

    Leave a comment:


  • BadAxe
    replied
    So if it ever becomes legal in states, what does that do for drug testing for jobs? Will they still test for MJ and deny the job if found positive? Or will they have to remove MJ things they look for? I mean, we all know that MJ stays in your system a lot longer than alcohol or any other drug. So I wonder what happens in employment drug testing in states where it becomes legal. What do you guys think?

    Leave a comment:


  • Crow
    replied
    Article originally posted by Snusify (confirmed)

    Sweden

    Sweden approves medical 'marijuana'

    Medicinal cannabis is now available as a prescription medicine in Sweden after the Medical Products Agency (Läkemedelsverket) approved a cannabis-based mouth spray for the treatment of multiple sclerosis (MS).

    "This is great news for those who can't get any relief from the most common drugs," said Jan Hillert, an MS researcher at Karolinska Institutet, to the Dagens Nyheter daily.

    The agency has said that it plans to closely monitor the prescription of the new drug to ensure against abuse.

    According to the agency however, the spray does not give any sort of "kick" as the cannabis content is in such small doses and common side effects include dizziness, nausea and drowsiness.

    People suffering from MS, which damages the brain and the central nervous system, often experience problems with stiffness and muscle cramps.

    The spray, which is used under the tongue, has been proved to be successful in alleviating MS symptoms by a series of medical studies.

    The cannabis spray is already available in the UK and Spain. Earlier this year it was approved by agencies in Germany and Denmark.

    It is not strictly illegal today to prescribe medicinal cannabis in Sweden but it is a lengthy and complicated process.

    The doctor has to apply for a special permit from the Medical Products Agency and if approved the closest pharmacy has to arrange a special import.
    Many thanks to Snusify for reporting this article.

    http://www.thelocal.se/39060/20120212/

    -----------------------

    SIDE-NOTE: The cannabis-based mouth spray is called Sativex. It's a pharmaceutical drug produced by GW Pharmaceuticals (based in the UK). According to GWPharma, the drug is currently approved for use in the UK, Spain, Germany, Denmark, New Zealand, and Canada.

    Leave a comment:


  • Crow
    replied
    United States

    8 States May Legalize Marijuana This Year – Did Yours Make the List?

    by Erik Altieri, NORML Communications Coordinator

    2012 has only just begun and it is already shaping up to be one of the most exciting and active years for marijuana law reform in some time. More than a dozen state legislatures are currently considering reform measures in some respect and 8 states are attempting to put legalization initiatives before voters this November.

    Many of these efforts are still in the signature gathering stage. Check out the list below to see if you might be able to vote ‘Yes’ on marijuana legalization in your state this year and how you can get involved to make that a reality. In addition to the legalization initiatives below several states, such as Ohio and Massachusetts, are working to also put medical marijuana initiatives before voters this year. To stay up to date on all the efforts to reform marijuana laws you can follow our “Legalize It 2012″ hub on Facebook and Twitter.
    --------------

    California

    Regulate Marijuana Like Wine

    Details: “The “Regulate Marijuana Like Wine” initiative intends to repeal prohibition of marijuana for adults, strictly regulate marijuana, just like the wine industry, allow for hemp agriculture and products while not changing laws regarding medical marijuana, impairment, work place drug laws, or laws regarding vehicle operation. This initiative would also provide specific personal possession exemptions, require dismissal of pending court cases for marijuana possession, and ban the advertising of non-medical marijuana.”
    More Info: www.regulatemarijuanalikewine.com

    Repeal Cannabis Prohibition Act 2012

    Details: “Aims to repeal current state criminal laws prohibiting the personal possession, use, transportation, and cultivation of cannabis by adults 19 years of age and older. During the first 180-days following the passage of the Act, the Legislature is authorized to create the California Cannabis Commission. This Commission will develop appropriate regulations for the commercial production and sales of cannabis, including licensing and taxation. Individuals are allowed to possess up to three pounds and grow a 100 sq. ft. canopy without being subject to regulations. It maintains penalties for possession by persons under 19, distribution to persons under 19, and driving while impaired.”
    More Info: www.repealcannabisprohibition.org

    --------------

    Colorado

    Regulate Marijuana Like Alcohol Act

    Details: “The Regulate Marijuana Like Alcohol Act of 2012 makes the adult use of marijuana legal, establishes a system in which marijuana is regulated and taxed similarly to alcohol, and allows for the cultivation of industrial hemp.”
    More Info: www.regulatemarijuana.org

    --------------

    Michigan

    The 2012 Michigan Ballot Initiative to End Marijuana Prohibition

    Details: “Proposes a state constitutional amend that states: “For persons who are at least 21 years of age who are not incarcerated, marihuana acquisition, cultivation, manufacture, sale, delivery, transfer, transportation, possession, ingestion, presence in or on the body, religious, medical, industrial, agricultural, commercial or personal use, or possession or use of paraphernalia shall not be prohibited, abridged or penalized in any manner, nor subject to civil forfeiture; provided that no person shall be permitted to operate an aircraft, motor vehicle, motorboat, ORV, snowmobile, train, or other heavy or dangerous equipment or machinery while impaired by marihuana.”
    More Info: www.help.repealtoday.org

    --------------

    Missouri

    Show-Me Cannabis Regulation

    Details: “A constitutional measure which would regulate cannabis like alcohol, provide access to medicine for cannabis patients, and open a market for farming industrial hemp in Missouri.”
    More Info: www.show-mecannabis.com

    --------------

    Montana

    Montana First: Ending Criminal Penalties for Marijuana

    Details: “The new petition is for a proposed amendment to the state constitution. It would add just two sentences to a portion of the constitution concerning adult rights, which already contains a reference to the legal age for the consumption of alcohol. [Stating] Adults have the right to responsibly purchase, consume, produce, and possess marijuana, subject to reasonable limitations, regulations, and taxation. Except for actions that endanger minors, children, or public safety, no criminal offense or penalty of this state shall apply to such activities.”
    More Info: www.montanafirst2012.org

    --------------

    Nebraska

    The Nebraska Cannabis Initiative

    Details: “Add Proposition 19 to the Nebraska Constitution whose object is to regulate and tax all commercial uses of cannabis, also known as marijuana, and to remove all laws regulating the private, noncommercial use of cannabis.”
    More Info: www.neprop19.org

    --------------

    Oregon

    Oregon Cannabis Tax Act of 2012

    Details: “The Oregon Cannabis Tax Act 2012 is a citizen’s initiative campaign to regulate marijuana and restore hemp. Just as ending alcohol prohibition and regulating that market has protected society, regulating marijuana will help wipe out crime. Restoring hemp, made from the seeds and stems of the marijuana plant for fuel, fiber and food, will put Oregon on the cutting edge of exciting new sustainable green industries and create untold multitudes of new jobs.”
    More Info: www.cannabistaxact.org

    Citizens for Sensible Law Enforcement: Initiative IP-24

    Details: “Currently known as IP-24, the measure would allow adults over 21 to use marijuana for personal use without fear of criminal sanctions. The bill has substantial safeguards to protect children and public safety. With hundreds of signature gatherers on the streets every day, CSLE is confident the measure will appear on the November 2012 ballot.”
    More Info: www.ompicampaign2012.org

    --------------

    Washington

    Initiative 502

    Details: “Washington State Initiative Measure No. 502 (I-502) would license and regulate marijuana production, distribution, and possession for persons over twenty-one; remove state-law criminal and civil penalties for activities that it authorizes; tax marijuana sales; and earmark marijuana-related revenues.”
    More Info: www.newapproachwa.org

    Leave a comment:


  • Crow
    replied
    Maryland (US)

    Medical Marijuana Bills Introduced in Maryland

    ANNAPOLIS – A pair of bills were introduced today in the Maryland House and Senate that would allow patients with certain qualifying conditions to use medical marijuana with doctors’ recommendations. The bills, HB 1024 and HB 1148, are based on the recommendations of a study panel created by the legislature in 2011 and were introduced in the House by Del. Dan Morhaim. Senator Jamie Raskin is expected to sponsor similar legislation in the Senate. One version of the legislation, championed by state legislators on the work group, allows doctors to recommend medical marijuana to their patients who could then purchase it from licensed dispensaries, all of which would be overseen by an independent commission. The second version, put forward by Department of Health and Mental Hygiene Secretary Joshua Sharfstein, tasks academic institutions with distribution of marijuana. Both bills would protect licensed patients from arrest and prosecution. Currently, patients are only afforded an affirmative defense in court, but are still subject to arrest even if they’re subsequently able to demonstrate medical necessity.

    Del. Cheryl Glenn has already introduced another medical marijuana bill that would allow patients to cultivate limited amounts of marijuana, in addition to establishing a dispensary system. Both work group models would restrict cultivation to state-registered growers.

    "There are some differences in these two plans when it comes to how medical marijuana is cultivated and distributed, but the bottom line is that both reports support changes to the status quo,” said Del. Morhaim, the only physician in the Maryland House. “Physicians, law enforcement officials, academics, and DHMH officials – we all agree that something needs to be done. Remember that the charge of the work group from the Governor and the Legislature was to "facilitate patient access to marijuana for medical purposes.” It's now our job as legislators to look at these proposals and enact workable solutions that for many patients can dramatically improve their quality of life."

    Senate sponsor Jamie Raskin echoed Morhaim’s stance. "Last session the General Assembly decided that it is not a crime for very ill people in the State of Maryland to use marijuana for palliative purposes in accordance with medical advice,” Raskin said. “What we left open was how such people can safely and legally access the drug. I'm determined that this session we come up with an effective mechanism for making medical marijuana available for the sick and suffering Marylanders who need it."

    If any of the bills pass, Maryland would become the 17th state, along with the District of Columbia, to allow seriously ill people to treat their conditions with medical marijuana. There are 17 other states considering similar legislation this year. A recent Gonzales Research poll showed that 64% of Marylanders support allowing medical marijuana in their state.
    http://www.mpp.org/media/press-relea...ana-bills.html

    Leave a comment:


  • Premium Parrots
    replied
    go here
    http://www.snuson.com/forum/showthre...porizer-thread

    to continue with vape discussion.

    Leave a comment:


  • Crow
    replied
    Originally posted by Los ßnus
    Damn this thread is long! Any other Volcanizers out there or am I the only one?

    Thinking of dusting it off and giving it a go tonight
    I had a Volcano, but I gave it to a friend who needed it more than me.

    Right now, I'm in the market for a vaporiser; and I'm waiting for a review on a vape that PP ordered before I buy a replacement.

    Leave a comment:


  • Crow
    replied
    Kentucky (US)

    Ky Senate Proposes Medical Marijuana Bill

    Kentucky State Senator Perry Clark has submitted Senate Bill 129. The Gatewood Galbraith Memorial Medical Marijuana Bill.
    According to the Kentucky Legislative website the bill reads as follows:

    AN ACT relating to medical marijuana.
    Amend and create various statutes in KRS Chapter 218A to make marijuana a schedule II drug with the limitation that a person for whom the drug has been prescribed may not possess more than five grams per month of the drug or have under cultivation more than five marijuana plants; create a new section of KRS Chapter 315 to require the Board of Pharmacy to establish a certification program for pharmacies seeking to dispense marijuana; designate this Act as the Gatewood Galbraith Memorial Medical Marijuana Act.


    Since the average medical marijuana user uses between 3/4 to 1.25 ounces a week, either the 5 grams are a misprint or the bill will have to be amended. At least now Kentucky's sick and disabled have a Bill to hang their hats on and it couldn't be better named.
    http://www.state-journal.com/news/si...5153215?page=0

    -----------------------

    Rhode Island (US)

    Support for Marijuana Policy Reform in Rhode Island: More Popular than the Politicians Think

    by Robert Capecchi, MPP

    Late last month, the Marijuana Policy Project commissioned Public Policy Polling to survey Rhode Island voter attitudes toward marijuana policy. The results are in, and the numbers indicate that Rhode Islanders from both sides of the aisle are clearly aware that marijuana prohibition is failed policy, and they are ready for change.

    A majority of Rhode Islanders appear to be fed up with the current marijuana prohibition. Of the 714 voters polled, 52% would like to see all penalties for personal possession and use of marijuana removed and marijuana treated in a manner similar to alcohol, where it would be taxed, regulated, and sold in state-licensed stores to adults over the age of 21. Perhaps somewhat surprisingly, the idea received bipartisan support and was backed by 55% of Democrats and 54% of Republicans. Legislation spearheaded by MPP to establish such a system will be introduced in Rhode Island this session.

    When Mason-Dixon Polling and Research asked the exact same question in 2008, only 41% of 625 voters surveyed supported regulated legalization of marijuana. That’s an increase of 11 percentage points among all voters in less than three years. The ’08 poll showed majority support among Democrats (52%) but strong opposition among Republican voters, with only 26% supporting and 66% opposing the idea just 33 months ago. This means we’ve seen support more than double among Rhode Island Republicans. So what’s going on here?
    Article continued at: http://blog.mpp.org/tax-and-regulate...hink/02032012/

    ---------------------------

    New York (US)

    New York City: Still The Marijuana Arrest Capital Of The World

    by Paul Armentano, NORML Deputy Director

    Low level marijuana arrests in New York City rose for the seventh straight year in 2011 to 50,680. The arrest total is the highest total on record since former pot smoker Mayor Michael Bloomberg took office and it is the second highest total of pot arrests ever recorded in the history of the city (just 587 arrests behind the record holding year 2000, when Mayor Rudolph Giuliani oversaw some 51,267 people arrested for marijuana violations).


    Shockingly, the near-record high arrest total comes just months after New York City Police Commissioner Ray Kelly called on officers to cease making marijuana misdemeanor arrests. Apparently, NYPD officers aren’t very good at listening to their commanding officer.

    Of course, what is most troubling about these arrest figures is that under state law they largely shouldn’t be occurring at all. Since 1977, New York State law has categorized the possession of 25 grams of marijuana or less as a violation, not a misdemeanor crime. So then how are NYPD making so many misdemeanor pot arrests? By violating the spirit of the law, if not the law itself.

    Rather than ticketing low level marijuana offenders, City police for over a decade have been taking advantage of a separate statute, NY State Penal Law 221.10, which makes it a criminal misdemeanor to possess pot if it is ‘open to public view.’ According to an investigation last year by New York City public radio station WNYC, it was determined that City cops routinely conduct warrantless ‘stop-and-frisk’ searches of civilians, find marijuana hidden on their persons, and then falsely charge them with possessing pot ‘open to public view.’
    Article continued at: http://blog.norml.org/2012/02/02/new...-of-the-world/


    ---------------------------

    Indiana (US)

    EDITORIAL: Form a study committee on marijuana policy

    Source: NWI (Indiana)

    State Sen. Karen Tallian wants to make most marijuana possession cases misdemeanors. What a change that would be from a toke-free Indiana.

    Tallian, D-Ogden Dunes, did not request a committee vote on Senate Bill 347 but took nearly an hour to explain how reducing criminal penalties for marijuana possession could benefit Indiana.

    It would have the effect of freeing up at least 250 beds a year in the state prison system and thousands of beds in county jails, according to the nonprofit Legislative Services Agency.

    In Indiana, possession of an amount of marijuana is punishable by up to a year in jail and a $5,000 fine. That's among the toughest penalties in the nation.

    "Marijuana possession is a victimless crime, and there's no reason to do this to our citizens, especially our our young people," Tallian said.

    But is it truly a victimless crime?

    We have been told for years that marijuana is a gateway drug that leads to more serious illegal drugs. That argument must not be ignored in the discussion of whether to ease penalties for marijuana possession.

    And does medicinal use of marijuana actually fight disease and ease symptoms, or would it simply create a state full of hypochondriacs who see various maladies as a way to legally possess an otherwise illegal substance?
    Article continued at: http://www.nwitimes.com/news/opinion...fd61ccea4.html

    ---------------------------

    Israel

    Cannabis Is “An Effective Treatment” For Cancer Patients, Israeli Study Concludes

    by Paul Armentano, NORML Deputy Director

    [Editor's note: This post is excerpted from this week's forthcoming NORML weekly media advisory. To have NORML's news alerts and legislative advisories delivered straight to your in-box, sign up here.]

    Some two-thirds of Israeli cancer patients authorized to use cannabis report long-term, symptomatic improvement from the plant, according to clinical data presented in late January at a conference of the Israeli Oncologists Union and reported this week in several international media outlets.

    Investigators at the Sheba Medical Center in Tel Aviv, in conjunction with the Israeli Cancer Association, assessed the efficacy of cannabis therapy over the course of one year in 264 patients with cancer. Israeli media reported the findings:
    “Some 61 percent of the respondents reported a significant improvement in their quality of life as a result of the medical marijuana, while 56 percent noted an improvement in their ability to manage pain. In general, 67 percent were in favor of the treatment, while 65 percent said they would recommend it to other patients.”
    The study concluded that cannabis is an “effective” treatment for certain symptoms of the disease cancer and recommended, “The treatment should be offered to the patients in earlier stages of cancer.”

    In the trial, the most common types of cancer for which medical marijuana was authorized was lung cancer (21 percent ), breast cancer (12 percent ) and pancreatic cancer (10 percent ).

    The study focused primarily on the use of cannabis to relieve various symptoms of cancer or cancer treatment, such as pain and nausea, but did not evaluate whether marijuana therapy could potentially suppress the proliferation of the disease. In preclinical trials, various cannabinoids – including THC and CBD (cannabidiol) – have been shown to selectively target and eliminate malignant cells and cancerous tumors.

    To date, some 6,000 Israelis possess government authorization to use cannabis therapeutically. Patients authorized by the federal program may either cultivate cannabis at home or they may obtain marijuana from one of the nation’s 12 licensed cannabis farms.

    Last summer, the Israeli Health Ministry formally acknowledged the therapeutic utility of cannabis and announced newly amended guidelines to more effectively govern the state-sponsored production and distribution of medical marijuana. The Ministry estimates that as many as 40,000 patients will eventually have access to medicinal cannabis once the Israeli program is fully implemented.
    NORML’s literature review of the anti-cancer properties of cannabis and cannabinoids is available here.

    http://www.haaretz.com/print-edition...ients-1.409918

    Leave a comment:

Related Topics

Collapse

Working...
X