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    DrugSense Weekly, Dec. 5, 2008 PDF Print E-mail
    Written by Administrator   
    Saturday, 06 December 2008 00:16

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    DRUGSENSE WEEKLY

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    DrugSense Weekly,              Dec. 5, 2008                        #578

    Read This Publication On-line at:  http://www.drugsense.org/current.htm

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    TABLE OF CONTENTS:

    * This Just In

        (1) OPED: Let's End Drug Prohibition
        (2) OPED: Our Drug Policy Is a Success
        (3) Hospitals Now a Theater in Mexico's Drug War
        (4) Casual Drug Users Blamed for Violence in Juarez

    * Weekly News in Review

    Drug Policy-

        (5) One Man's Military-Industrial-Media Complex
        (6) Column: Legalizing Drugs: The Money Argument
        (7) DEA on Lookout for Savvy Women
        (8) Group Uses Marijuana As Sacrament

    Law Enforcement & Prisons-

        (9) Federal Judges To Rule On Calif Prison Crowding
        (10) Police Dogs Coming Soon To A Skytrain Near You
        (11) FBI: Police Officers, Jail Guards Were Muscle For 'Drug Deals'
        (12) D.C. Settles In Death of Paralyzed Jail Inmate

    Cannabis & Hemp-

        (13) Anti-Marijuana Campaign Earns National Honors
        (14) State's Attorney Agrees: County Marijuana Priority Law Void
        (15) Supreme Court Refuses To Hear Case On Seized Medical Marijuana
        (16) Are Marijuana Laws Changing To Keep Up With Public Opinion?

    International News-

        (17) Swiss Enshrine Legal Heroin Program
        (18) Holland Bans Magic Mushrooms
        (19) Cannabis Cautions Soar By 150 %
        (20) Researchers High On Ancient Pot Find

    * Hot Off The 'Net

        Prohibition Ended 75 Years Ago, But What Have We Learned? / Rob Kampia
        Legal Ease With Kirk Tousaw
        Drug Truth Network
        Multidisciplinary  Association  For  Psychedelic  Studies Bulletin
        Black  Police  Association  Writes  To  Obama  To  Oppose  Ramstad
        Genetic Analyses Of Ancient Cannabis From Central Asia
        LEAP  Speaker  Neill  Franklin  Discusses  Ending  Prohibition

    * What You Can Do This Week

        Take Action To End Today's Failed Prohibition
        Apply For A Job With MPP

    * Letter Of The Week

        Pot Isn't Dangerous / David R. Ford

    * Letter Writer Of The Month - November

        Russell Barth

    * Feature Article

        20  Points  Regarding  Drug Prohibition And Political Corruption /
        By Stephen Young

    * Quote of the Week

        W. C. Fields

    DrugSense  needs  your  support  to  continue this newsletter and many
    other important projects - see how you can help at
    http://www.drugsense.org/donate.htm

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    THIS JUST IN
    =======================================================================

    (1) OPED: LET'S END DRUG PROHIBITION

    Pubdate: Fri, 5 Dec 2008
    Source: Wall Street Journal (US)
    Copyright: 2008 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
    Author: Ethan A. Nadelmann

    Most  Americans  agreed  that  alcohol  suppression  was  worse  than
    alcohol consumption.

    It's  already  shaping  up  as  a  day  of  celebration,  with parties
    planned,  bars  prepping  for  recession-defying rounds of drinks, and
    newspapers  set  to  publish cocktail recipes concocted especially for
    the day.

    But  let's  hope  it  also  serves  as  a day of reflection. We should
    consider  why  our  forebears  rejoiced  at  the  relegalization  of a
    powerful  drug  long  associated with bountiful pleasure and pain, and
    consider too the lessons for our time.

    The  Americans  who  voted  in  1933  to  repeal  prohibition differed
    greatly  in  their  reasons for overturning the system. But almost all
    agreed  that  the evils of failed suppression far outweighed the evils
    of alcohol consumption.

    The  change  from  just  15  years  earlier,  when  most Americans saw
    alcohol as the root of the problem and voted to ban it, was
    dramatic.  Prohibition's  failure  to  create  an Alcohol Free Society
    sank  in  quickly.  Booze  flowed as readily as before, but now it was
    illicit, filling criminal coffers at taxpayer expense.

     [snip]

    Continues: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v08/n1092/a03.html

    ===

    (2) OPED: OUR DRUG POLICY IS A SUCCESS

    Pubdate: Fri, 5 Dec 2008
    Source: Wall Street Journal (US)
    Copyright: 2008 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
    Author: John Walters

    Workplace Tests for Cocaine Show the Lowest Use on Record.

    Whatever  challenges  await him, President-elect Barack Obama will not
    have  to  reinvent the wheel when it comes to keeping a lid on the use
    of  illegal  drugs.  Our  policy  has  been a success -- although that
    success is one of Washington's best kept secrets.

    Reported  drug  use  among  eighth, 10th and 12th graders has declined
    for  six  straight years. Teen use of cocaine, marijuana and inhalants
    is  down  significantly,  while  consumption  of  methamphetamine  and
    hallucinogens like LSD and Ecstasy has all but collapsed.

    The  number  of  workplace tests that are positive for cocaine is down
    sharply,  to  the  lowest  levels  on record. Even the sudden spike of
    meth  use  -- remember the headlines from just a few years ago? -- has
    yielded to a combination of state and federal regulations
    controlling  meth  ingredients. And abroad, crackdowns in Colombia and
    Mexico  have  caused  the  price  of  cocaine to roughly double in the
    past two years.

    These  results  are  testament  to the efforts and teamwork of men and
    women  who  are  virtually  unknown  to  most  Americans. They include
    people  like  community  organizer  Rev.  Richard  McCain in southeast
    Cleveland,  who  risked  his  life  to  drive crack dealers out of his
    neighborhood;  drug-treatment  experts  like  Dr.  Johanna Ferman, who
    developed  new  ways  to  reach  female addicts with young children in
    the  nation's  capital; and principals like Lisa Brady, who instituted
    a  drug-testing  program  and watched drug use fall like a rock at her
    Flemington,  N.J.,  high  school. They include Nashville, Tenn., Judge
    Seth  Norman,  who  got  tired  of seeing the same faces over and over
    again  and  decided to found a drug court, where he coaches defendants
    to stay clean and sanctions them when they fail.

     [snip]

    Continues: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v08/n1092/a04.html

    ===

    (3) HOSPITALS NOW A THEATER IN MEXICO'S DRUG WAR

    Pubdate: Fri, 5 Dec 2008
    Source: New York Times (NY)
    Copyright: 2008 The New York Times Company
    Author: Marc Lacey

    TIJUANA,  Mexico  --  The  sedated  patient,  his  bullet wounds still
    fresh  from  a shootout the night before, was lying on a gurney in the
    intensive  care  unit of a prestigious private hospital here late last
    month  with  intravenous  fluids  dripping  into  his  arm.  Suddenly,
    steel-faced  gunmen  barged  in and filled him with even more bullets.
    This time, he was dead for sure.

    Hit  men  pursuing  rivals  into  intensive  care  units and emergency
    rooms.  Shootouts  in  lobbies  and  corridors.  Doctors kidnapped and
    held  for  ransom,  or  threatened with death if a wounded gunman dies
    under  their  care.  With alarming speed, Mexico's violent drug war is
    finding its way into the seeming sanctuary of the nation's
    hospitals,  shaking  the  health  care  system  and  leaving  workers
    fearing  for  their  lives  while  trying to save the lives of others.

    "Remember  that  hospital  scene  from  'The  Godfather?'  " asked Dr.
    Hector  Rico,  an  otolaryngologist  here,  speaking about the part in
    which  Michael  Corleone  saves  his  hospitalized  father  from a hit
    squad. "That's how we live."

     [snip]

    Continues: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v08/n1093/a05.html

    ===

    (4) CASUAL DRUG USERS BLAMED FOR VIOLENCE IN JUAREZ

    Pubdate: Fri, 5 Dec 2008
    Source: El Paso Times (TX)
    Copyright: 2008 El Paso Times
    Author: Stephanie Sanchez

    EL  PASO  --  Sometimes controversial and always outspoken, former Los
    Angeles  Police  Chief  Daryl  Gates  said  Thursday  that casual drug
    users  in  the  U.S.  are  at  the  root of the violence in Juarez and
    should be shot.

    Gates  was  in  El  Paso  to  speak at a ceremony for graduating peace
    officers.

    Gates,  who  led  the Los Angeles Police Department from 1978 to 1992,
    also  predicted  that  the violence in Juarez would spill over into El
    Paso  and  that  law  enforcement  agencies on the U.S. side should be
    prepared.

    "I  don't  think  the  people in the United States are grasping what a
    serious  problem  it  is.  Mexico has lost more people in a very short
    period  of  time  than  those  lost  in Iraq or Afghanistan," he said.

    "I  think,  you  know,  I have such a low opinion of the people in the
    United  States  who continue to use drugs. They are really responsible
    for  what's  happening in Mexico -- they really are. We go along every
    day.  We  don't  take  that  responsibility  that  we ought to assume.
    Somebody  asked  me  one  time  about  casual  drug users, I said they
    ought to take them out and shoot them."

     [snip]

    Continues: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v08/n1092/a02.html

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    WEEKLY NEWS IN REVIEW
    =======================================================================

    Domestic News- Policy
    ----------------------------------

    COMMENT: (5-8)

     As  if  everything  that happens in the U.S. drug czar's office isn't
     disturbing  enough,  now  the  New  York  Times  reports that the job
     appears  to be a launching pad for lucrative but morally questionable
     influence peddling, at least for one former drug czar.

     Elsewhere,  the  economic  arguments for ending drug prohibition grow
     as  financial  news  worsens for government; in a change of pace, the
     DEA  looks  for  "savvy"  applicants;  and  a Maine group wants to be
     exempt from marijuana laws based on religious freedom.

    ===

    (5) ONE MAN'S MILITARY-INDUSTRIAL-MEDIA COMPLEX

    Pubdate: Sun, 30 Nov 2008
    Source: New York Times (NY)
    Copyright: 2008 The New York Times Company
    Author: David Barstow

    In  the  spring  of  2007  a  tiny  military contractor with a slender
    track  record  went  shopping  for  a  precious  Beltway  commodity.

    The  company,  Defense  Solutions,  sought  the  services of a retired
    general  with  national  stature,  someone who could open doors at the
    highest  levels  of government and help it win a huge prize: the right
    to supply Iraq with thousands of armored vehicles.

    Access  like  this  does  not  come  cheap,  but it was an opportunity
    potentially  worth  billions  in  sales,  and  Defense  Solutions soon
    found  its  man.  The  company  signed  Barry  R. McCaffrey, a retired
    four-star  Army  general  and  military  analyst  for  NBC  News, to a
    consulting contract starting June 15, 2007.

    Four  days  later  the  general  swung into action. He sent a personal
    note and 15-page briefing packet to David H. Petraeus, the
    commanding  general  in  Iraq, strongly recommending Defense Solutions
    and  its  offer  to  supply  Iraq  with  5,000  armored  vehicles from
    Eastern  Europe.  "No  other proposal is quicker, less costly, or more
    certain to succeed," he said.

    Thus,  within  days of hiring General McCaffrey, the Defense Solutions
    sales  pitch  was  in  the  hands  of  the American commander with the
    greatest influence over Iraq's expanding military.

    "That's  what  I pay him for," Timothy D. Ringgold, chief executive of
    Defense Solutions, said in an interview.

    General  McCaffrey  did  not  mention  his  new  contract with Defense
    Solutions  in  his  letter to General Petraeus. Nor did he disclose it
    when  he  went  on  CNBC  that  same  week  and  praised the commander
    Defense  Solutions  was  now  counting  on  for  help -- "He's got the
    heart  of  a  lion" -- or when he told Congress the next month that it
    should  immediately  supply  Iraq  with  large  numbers  of  armored
    vehicles and other equipment.

    He  had  made  similar  arguments  before  he  was  hired  by  Defense
    Solutions,  but  this  time  he  went  further.  In  his  testimony to
    Congress,  General  McCaffrey  criticized  a  Pentagon  plan to supply
    Iraq  with  several hundred armored vehicles made in the United States
    by  a  competitor of Defense Solutions. He called the plan "not in the
    right  ballpark"  and  urged Congress to instead equip Iraq with 5,000
    armored vehicles.

    "We've  got  Iraqi  army  battalions driving around in Toyota trucks,"
    he  said,  echoing an argument made to General Petraeus in the Defense
    Solutions briefing packet.

     [snip]

    Continues: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v08/n1077/a02.html

    ===

    (6) COLUMN: LEGALIZING DRUGS: THE MONEY ARGUMENT

    Pubdate: Tue, 2 Dec 2008
    Source: Baltimore Sun (MD)
    Copyright: 2008 The Baltimore Sun Company
    Author: Dan Rodricks

    Friday  marks  75  years  since repeal of the Volstead Act, which made
    the  manufacture,  distribution and consumption of alcoholic beverages
    illegal  in  the  United  States.  As  the  anniversary  of the end of
    Prohibition  approaches,  modern  advocates  of  a  similar repeal are
    calling  again  for  the  decriminalization  of  heroin,  cocaine  and
    marijuana  -  and this time they've come packing a money argument by a
    Harvard economist.

    I  like  money  arguments.  They are usually a lot more effective than
    emotional  ones  or  those  that  exploit stubborn prejudices with the
    intent of maintaining the status quo.

    As  the  American  economy  recedes, state and local tax revenues fall
    and  government  budgets  are cut, the money argument for changing the
    way  we  do  things  - from enforcing the laws to educating children -
    makes the most sense and has the strongest appeal.

    I've  made  the  argument in this space for more government investment
    in  drug  treatment,  criminal rehabilitation and ex-offender services
    -  and  not just because it's the humane thing to do, but because it's
    the common-sense thing to do.

    We  have  the  highest per capita incarceration rate in the world, and
    fancy  revolving  doors on an expensive prison system that takes back,
    within  just  three  years, more than half of all inmates it releases.
    We  keep  financing  public  failure  on  a  scale that would never be
    tolerated in private enterprise.

     [snip]

    Continues: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v08/n1083/a10.html

    ===

    (7) DEA ON LOOKOUT FOR SAVVY WOMEN

    Pubdate: Wed, 3 Dec 2008
    Source: Houston Chronicle (TX)
    Copyright: 2008 Houston Chronicle Publishing Company Division, Hearst Newspaper
    Author: Dane Schiller, Houston Chronicle

    Recruiter Emphasizes the Value of Brains Over Brawn

    A  federal  drug  agent gets a badge, and is trained to shoot, kick in
    doors and slap on handcuffs.

    Often  though,  it  is  the  smarter  agent, not the stronger one, who
    catches the bad guy.

    "It  is  brains, not just brawn," said Violet Szeleczky, a senior Drug
    Enforcement  Administration  agent  based  in Houston. "You have to be
    able  to  put  two  and  two  together,"  she  said  of  the twists an
    investigation takes.

    Szeleczky,  who  oversees  the  recruiting  squad  in  this region, is
    hoping  to  get  that  message  across in order to boost the number of
    women  who  might otherwise shy away from a career with the DEA, which
    is 91 percent male.

    It  is  a  disparity  not  unlike those among the ranks of the Houston
    Police  Department,  the Marine Corps and other outfits also trying to
    extend their appeal to female recruits.

    The  HPD,  which  is  86  percent  male, recently unveiled advertising
    that  features  images  of  female officers and testimonials posted on
    the Web.

    "In  my  entire  life,  I  have  never felt more purposeful and elated
    every  time  I  wake  up to start a new day," says Anna Swanson, a new
    officer  who  was  the  leader of her HPD Academy class. "I have never
    been  so  happy  and  healthy  as  I  am now and full of direction and
    purpose."

     [snip]

    Continues: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v08/n1087/a10.html

    ===

    (8) GROUP USES MARIJUANA AS SACRAMENT

    Pubdate: Sat, 29 Nov 2008
    Source: Bangor Daily News (ME)
    Copyright: 2008 Bangor Daily News Inc.
    Author: Judy Harrison

    Temple  Of  Advanced  Enlightenment Seeks Religious Exemption From DEA

    BANGOR,  Maine  -  Every  Tuesday and Sunday afternoon the living room
    in  the  Rev.  Kevin  Loring's  apartment  becomes  a  tiny  house  of
    worship.

    The  head  of  the 3-year-old Temple of Advanced Enlightenment earlier
    this  week  stood  next  to  a round table as five others sat on sofas
    and  chairs  pushed  back  against  the  walls.  They formed an uneven
    circle in the second-floor walk-up.

    "We  use  music  as  a  form  of prayer," Loring, 28, told them as the
    service  began.  "It  helps  us  to  see  a  little bit more clearly."

    He  played  Ben  Harper's  "I'll  Rise" as the worshippers bowed their
    heads.  After  the  song, the minister gave thanks to the Pure One and
    to  Mother  Earth. Then the minister prepared the sacrament by placing
    a small amount of marijuana in a wooden pipe.

    "The  taking  of  the sacrament is a very serious tradition," he said.
    "It's  a  very  holy  spiritual tool. It is with great respect that we
    take part in the sacrament."

    Loring  lit  the  pipe  at  4:20  p.m.,  inhaled, exhaled, then took a
    drink  of  water  from  a  large  clear glass. The minister passed the
    pipe  and  lighter  to his fellow clergyman, the Rev. Garrett Wozneak,
    28,  of  Glenburn. Wozneak inhaled, exhaled, passed the pipe and drank
    from  the  glass  Loring  offered  as  they participated in the Sacred
    Smoking Circle.

    In  smoking  marijuana  followed  by taking a drink, participants take
    in  the  four  elements  - marijuana from the earth, fire to light it,
    wind  to  inhale  and exhale the smoke and water, according to Loring.

    "Cannabis  is  the  Divine  Inheritance  given to all people by Mother
    Earth  so  that  we  may  unlock  the  mystery  of the many and varied
    messages of the Pure One," the group's Web site states.

     [snip]

    Continues: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v08/n1075/a02.html

    =======================================================================

    Law Enforcement & Prisons
    -------------------------

    COMMENT: (9-12)

     More  crisis,  corruption and overkill, and a rare bit of justice, at
     least for the survivors.

    ===

    (9) FEDERAL JUDGES TO RULE ON CALIF. PRISON CROWDING

    Pubdate: Mon, 01 Dec 2008
    Source: Sacramento Union, The (CA)
    Copyright: 2008 The Sacramento Union
    Author: Don Thompson

    California's  day  of  reckoning has finally come for three decades of
    tough-on-crime policies that led to overcrowded prisons and
    unconstitutional conditions for inmates.

    The  federal  courts  have  already  found  that  the  prison system's
    delivery  of  health  and mental health care is so negligent that it's
    a direct cause of inmate deaths.

    A  special  three-judge  panel  reconvenes  Tuesday and is prepared to
    decide  whether  crowding  has  become  so  bad  that  inmates  cannot
    receive  proper  care.  If  they do, the panel will decide if lowering
    the inmate population is the only way to fix the problems.

    That  could  result  in  an  order  to  release  tens  of thousands of
    California  inmates  before  their  terms  are  finished,  a move Gov.
    Arnold  Schwarzenegger  and  Republican  lawmakers  say would endanger
    public safety.

    "The time has come: The extreme, pervasive and long-lasting
    overcrowding  in  California  prisons  must  be  addressed,"  attorney
    Michael  Bien,  representing  inmates,  told  the  judges  during  the
    opening of the trial.

     [snip]

    Continues: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v08/n1080/a08.html

    ===

    (10) POLICE DOGS COMING SOON TO A SKYTRAIN NEAR YOU

    Pubdate: Tue, 02 Dec 2008
    Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC)
    Copyright: 2008 The Vancouver Sun
    Author: Kelly Sinoski

    TransLink  steps  up  security  at  certain  stations  in an effort to
    quell  the  perception  that  the  transit  line is a magnet for crime

    TransLink  plans  to  boost  bike patrols and introduce police dogs at
    SkyTrain  stations  in  an  attempt  to  bolster  security and quell a
    public  perception  that  the  transit  line  is  a  magnet for crime.

    The  move,  based on two recent TransLink public opinion studies and a
    crime  analysis,  is  aimed  at  securing  the  public transit system,
    particularly at stations where transit users say they feel
    "apprehensive" or the least safe.

    The  security  review  comes  ahead  of the 2009 opening of the Canada
    Line  linking  Vancouver  and  Richmond  and the 2010 Winter Olympics.

    "We  really  needed  to  step back and have an honest look at what was
    happening  and  how  to  deal with it," TransLink spokesman Ken Hardie
    said.

    TransLink  has  already  boosted the number of SkyTrain attendants and
    transit  police  at stations perceived to be the least safe, including
    Surrey  Central,  New  Westminster,  Broadway,  Main  and  Metrotown.

    It  is  also in the midst of training bike patrols, upgrading stations
    such  as  Broadway and testing sniffer dogs, making use of city police
    and RCMP dogs trained in detecting drugs and explosives.

    Transit  Police  Chief  Ward Clapham said if the dogs work out and are
    accepted  by  the  public, transit police could develop their own team
    of  sniffer  dogs, using either German shepherds or Labradors, or work
    in partnership with Vancouver police and RCMP dog teams.

     [snip]

    Continues: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v08/n1082/a06.html

    ===

    (11) FBI: POLICE OFFICERS, JAIL GUARDS WERE MUSCLE FOR 'DRUG DEALS'

    Pubdate: Tue, 02 Dec 2008
    Source: Chicago Sun-Times (IL)
    Copyright: 2008 The Sun-Times Co.
    Author: Frank Main

    Four  Harvey  police  officers,  10  Cook  County  jail  guards  and a
    Chicago  police  officer  have  been charged with providing muscle for
    what  they  thought  were  major  drug  deals  -  but were really fake
    transactions that were part of an FBI sting.

    In  one  of  the  largest  crackdowns  on  law enforcement officers in
    recent  years,  the  FBI is accusing the officers of accepting between
    $400  and  $4,000  each  on one or more occasions to serve as lookouts
    and  intervene  if police or rival drug dealers attempted to interfere
    with shipments of cocaine and heroin.

    In  May,  for instance, jail guards Ahyetoro Taylor and Raphael Manuel
    accompanied someone they thought brokered large-scale drug
    transactions but was really an undercover FBI agent.

    A  twin-propeller  plane  landed  at the west suburban DuPage Airport,
    where  they  boarded  and  began  counting  what  they  thought was 80
    kilograms  of  cocaine  stashed  in  four  duffel  bags,  according to
    federal authorities.

    They  allegedly  took  the  bags to the undercover FBI agent's car and
    watched  as  another  undercover  agent  pulled up in a Mercedes, took
    the bags and drove off.

    Taylor and Manuel took $4,000 each, authorities said.

     [snip]

    Continues: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v08/n1084/a01.html

    ===

    (12) D.C. SETTLES IN DEATH OF PARALYZED JAIL INMATE

    Pubdate: Wed, 3 Dec 2008
    Source: Washington Post (DC)
    Copyright: 2008 The Washington Post Company
    Author: Del Quentin Wilber, Washington Post Staff Writer

    The  mother  of a quadriplegic inmate who died in 2004 after suffering
    breathing problems at the D.C. jail has reached financial
    settlements  with  the District government and his care providers, her
    attorneys disclosed yesterday.

    The  settlements  were  reached in the controversial death of Jonathan
    Magbie,  a  27-year-old  Maryland  man who was paralyzed from the neck
    down and used a mouth-operated wheelchair.

    Magbie  died  four  days  into  a  10-day jail sentence for possessing
    marijuana,  which  he  said  he  used to ease the discomfort caused by
    his  disability.  The  jail infirmary, where he was housed for several
    days,  wasn't  equipped  with  the  ventilator he needed to breathe at
    night.

    His  death  sparked  several  government investigations, which exposed
    major  lapses  in Magbie's care at the D.C. jail and Greater Southeast
    Hospital.

    Attorneys  for  his mother, Mary R. Scott, declined to provide details
    of  the  financial  settlement,  which  she  reached  with  the  city,
    private  contractors  and  the  insurance company that covered doctors
    at the hospital. The American Civil Liberties Union, which
    represented  Scott,  called  the  settlement  "substantial"  in a news
    release.

     [snip]

    Continues: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v08/n1083/a11.html

    =======================================================================

    Cannabis & Hemp-
    ---------------------------

    COMMENT: ( - )

     Based  on  the  number  of  plants  torn up and people arrested,  an
     anti-cannabis  campaign  in  California  was  celebrated in the U.S.
     capital as a great success.
     
     Cannabis  warriors  in  Hawaii are finding reasons not to implement a
     new  lowest  enforcement  priority  initiative  on  the  Big  Island.

     Medicinal  cannabis  activists won a legal victory last week when the
     California  Supreme  Court  declined to hear an appeal of lower court
     rulings,  which  ordered  the  Garden  Grove  City Police to return a
     patient's now three year old stash.

     Finally,  an  interview  with  High Times Editor David Bienenstock on
     his new cannabis smoker's handbook.

    (13) ANTI-MARIJUANA CAMPAIGN EARNS NATIONAL HONORS

    Pubdate: Wed, 03 Dec 2008
    Source: Porterville Recorder (CA)
    Copyright: 2008 Freedom Communications Inc.
    Author: Glen Faison

    Timing: Sheriff In Nation's Capital Thursday.

    A  trial  program  in  Tulare  County  that  targets marijuana growing
    operations  proved so successful it's being recognized Thursday in the
    nation's capital.

    The  Sheriff's  Department  was  nominated for, and has received, this
    year's National Marijuana Initiative Award.

    Sheriff Bill Wittman is in Washington, D.C. to receive the recognition
    of  achievements  during a ceremony in the Eisenhower Office Building.

    The  award  is  in  recognition  of the marijuana eradication and drug
    trafficking  investigations  resulting  from  operation  LOCCUST.

    Operation  LOCCUST  was  a  law enforcement demonstration project that
    blended  the  region's  best  capabilities  into a unified attack upon
    marijuana  cultivators  and  the  criminal enterprises bankrolling the
    cultivation  sites,  according  to  information  released by Sheriff's
    Department spokeswoman Sgt. Chris Douglass.

    The  effort  led  to removal of thousands of marijuana plants prior to
    harvest, in addition to a number of arrests.

     [snip]
     
    The  season's  effort  involved more than 240 federal, state and local
    agency  personnel,  representing 14 local, state and federal agencies.

    By  day  and  by  night,  uniformed  police patrolled the dusty Sierra
    Mountain  roads  to  identify  possible  suspects," Douglass said in a
    prepared  release.  "Law  enforcement  took  control  of the usual and
    accustomed  marijuana  growing  regions  to  make  LOCCUST a success."

     [snip]

    Continues: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v08.n1089.a05.html

    ===

    (14) STATE'S ATTORNEY AGREES: COUNTY MARIJUANA PRIORITY LAW VOID

    Pubdate: Mon, 01 Dec 2008
    Source: West Hawaii Today (HI)
    Copyright: 2008 West Hawaii Today
    Author:  John Burnett, Stephens Media

    State, Federal Jurisdiction Trump County Initiative

    HILO  -- County Prosecutor Jay Kimura says he has consulted with state
    Attorney  General  Mark  Bennett, and still views the Project Peaceful
    Sky ordinance as "unenforceable."

    The  measure,  which Big Island voters approved overwhelmingly Nov. 4,
    would make the personal adult use of marijuana the county's lowest law
    enforcement priority. It would leave the enforcement of marijuana laws
    to  each  police  officer's  personal discretion, and would direct the
    County  Council  not  to  accept  state or federal funds for marijuana
    eradication.

    "On the face of the ordinance, it appears to violate the separation of
    powers requirement under the (County) Charter, and as far as the state
    marijuana  laws,  there  is a pre-emption issue," Kimura told Stephens
    Media  last  week.  "Under the Constitution, the state Legislature can
    pass  laws,  and  in  the  areas where it passes laws, it prevents the
    county from passing contrary laws.

    "We prosecute under the authority of the Attorney
    General,  so these are state laws. So that would not change. As far as
    how  the county proceeds on it at the police level, they're also bound
    by  the  Constitution to prosecute all laws, if they're valid laws, so
    it  really  wouldn't change anything. They would still need to enforce
    the law."

    Police  Chief Lawrence Mahuna, who is retiring Dec. 31, earlier called
    the  initiative,  which  passed  muster with Hawaii County voters by a
    margin  of  nearly  10,000 votes, a "resolution," not a law, and added
    "there  will  be  no  change  how  we  prioritize  the  enforcement of
    marijuana.  The resolution does not invalidate federal law. It doesn't
    legalize  marijuana.  It's  still  a Schedule 1 controlled substance."

    "We will continue in our efforts to reduce the availability of illegal
    marijuana," Mahuna said in early November.

     [snip]
     
    Continues: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v08.n1087.a05.html

    ===

    (15) SUPREME COURT REFUSES TO HEAR CASE ON SEIZED MEDICAL MARIJUANA

    Pubdate: Tue, 2 Dec 2008
    Source: Los Angeles Times (CA)
    Copyright: 2008 Los Angeles Times
    Author: Christopher Goffard
    Referenced: http://AmericansForSafeAccess.org/downloads/Kha_USSC.pdf
    Cited: Americans for Safe Access http://www.americansforsafeaccess.org

    Garden  Grove  Had  Appealed  a Ruling That Ordered the Return of Drug
    Seized From a Patient During a Traffic Stop.

    More  than three years after Garden Grove police seized a small amount
    of  marijuana  from  a chronic pain patient, the U.S. Supreme Court on
    Monday  refused  to  consider  the  city's  argument  -- which divided
    California's major law enforcement organizations -- that it should not
    have to give the drugs back.

    Advocates  cheered  the  development  as  a  step  forward for medical
    marijuana users to get their "medicine" back from police.

    "This  is  our biggest legal victory to date, and we're very glad it's
    now  become  final,"  said  Joe Elford, an attorney with Americans for
    Safe  Access,  an  Oakland-based  medical  marijuana  advocacy  group.

    City  officials  expressed  disappointment and said their position was
    never  to  challenge  the  constitutionality  of  California's medical
    marijuana law, only whether police could be forced to return the drug.

    Police  pulled  over  Felix Kha, a Garden Grove resident, in June 2005
    for a traffic violation and found him in possession of one-third of an
    ounce of marijuana.

    Though  Orange  County prosecutors dropped drug charges after a doctor
    confirmed  that  the  cannabis  was for medical use, police refused to
    return  the  drugs  on the grounds that to do so violated federal drug
    distribution laws.

    A  judge  in Orange County Superior Court sided with Kha, ordering the
    police to return his marijuana. But the city again refused and instead
    appealed  to  California's  4th District Court of Appeal. The court of
    appeal  also sided with Kha, declaring that patients enjoy a federally
    protected property right to their medical marijuana.

     [snip]
     
    Continues: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v08.n1082.a09.html

    ===

    (16) ARE MARIJUANA LAWS CHANGING TO KEEP UP WITH PUBLIC OPINION?

    Pubdate: Wed, 03 Dec 2008
    Source: Shepherd Express (Milwaukee, WI)
    Copyright: 2008 Alternative Publications Inc.
    Author: Lisa Kaiser

    A Shepherd Q&A With High Times Editor David Bienenstock

    People  have been smoking pot ever since they discovered that sparking
    one  was good clean fun. So why do we need The Official High Times Pot
    Smoker's  Handbook,  published  just  in time for the holidays? Editor
    David Bienenstock explains that even an experienced stoner could learn
    a  few things-as well as get involved in the larger marijuana movement
    to  make  pot  smoking legal, especially for those who are chronically
    ill.

    In  this  Shepherd  Q&A,  Bienenstock  also  discusses President-elect
    Barack Obama's proposed drug policy changes, why Wisconsin should join
    the  13  states that have legalized medical marijuana, and some of the
    best things to do when you're stoned.

    Shepherd: Why did you decide to write an official High Times pot
    smoker's  handbook?  Are you saying that we've been doing it wrong all
    of these years?

    Bienenstock: The best answer I can give you is that Bill Clinton was a
    Rhodes  scholar,  a  student  at Oxford University, and he didn't even
    know  he  should inhale. So I think even the most well-seasoned smoker
    could stand to learn something new.

    Shepherd: The war on drugs wasn't discussed much during this
    presidential  campaign.  But  will  Obama's  drug  policy  differ from
    Bush's?

    Bienenstock: Yes. Short answer, yes. Whether or not it's going to be
    "change  you  can  breathe in" is yet to be determined. But we've gone
    from  one  of the worst administrations on everything you can imagine,
    including  drug policy, to at least a chance to go in a new direction.
    I  can't  say  what Obama is going to do. But what he's promised to do
    already  in  the  short term is to have the federal government get off
    the backs of the states that have approved medical marijuana. And that
    in and of itself would be a huge change in our policy.

     [snip]
     
    Shepherd: Here's the part of the interview where you can crassly plug
    your book. Why should it be under everyone's Christmas tree this year?

    Bienenstock: Even if you do smoke pot, I hope that you would find a
    lot  to learn from reading it, and have a lot of fun. And it does make
    a  great  gift,  because everybody-everybody, everybody-knows somebody
    who  smokes  pot  and  enjoys  it.  And  they'll think you're cool and
    they'll  know  that  you respect them and their lifestyle. You can buy
    the book for them and read it first and learn a little something about
    your friends and neighbors.

    I  want pot smokers to be knowledgeable about what we're doing, and to
    be  proud  of what we're doing and to be well versed in it and to feel
    that we're part of a large community full of good people.

    What's your take?

    Continues: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v08.n1086.a11.html

    =======================================================================

    International News
    ---------------------------

    COMMENT: (17- )

     The Swiss this week, in a national referendum, approved a
     prescription  heroin  program  for  addicts,  but  at  the  same time
     rejected  a  bid  to  decriminalize  marijuana.  While  "Needle Park"
     open-air  heroin  sales  and  use  have  occupied  foreign media, the
     successful  Swiss  prescription  heroin  program,  started  in  1994,
     didn't  captivate  media  in  quite the same way. Prohibitionist U.S.
     and  the  U.N.  have criticized the program as "fuelling drug abuse,"
     but  other  countries  (Canada,  Spain,  Belgium, Holland) have begun
     similar trial programs.

     Holland  this  week  extended a ban of dried psychedelic mushrooms to
     include  fresh  psychedelic  mushrooms,  as  well.  Users  say  magic
     mushrooms  can  be  used as "aids in spiritual awareness, [to] gain[]
     personal  insight." To spare people from "unpredictable and therefore
     risky  behaviour,"  the  Dutch  Justice Ministry will now jail people
     for up to four years for possessing them.

     Peers  (members  of  the U.K. House of Lords) last week "spoke out in
     the  House  of  Lords to support delaying government plans to upgrade
     cannabis  from  Class  C  to  Class  B  after  it  was opposed by the
     Advisory  Council  on  the  Misuse  of Drugs," the Lancashire Evening
     Post  reported.  The  news  that  members  of  the House of Lords had
     spoken  against  government  plans  to re-classify cannabis to a more
     serious  "Class  C", came amidst a 151% increase in cannabis warnings
     handed  out  in  Lancashire. "The police should be spending more time
     looking  for real crime as opposed to busting people for a little bit
     of  dope when they are not doing real harm," responded Don Barnard of
     the Legalise Cannabis Alliance.

     And  finally this week, scientists were stunned to find almost a kilo
     of  "psychoactive"  cannabis  buried  in a tomb in northwestern China
     about  2,700  years  ago.  "To  our  knowledge,  these investigations
     provide  the  oldest documentation of cannabis as a pharmacologically
     active  agent,"  says  Dr  Ethan  Russo,  neurologist  and  author of
     numerous  books and papers on the plant. Buried with what is believed
     to  be  a  shaman,  and  preserved  because  of  arid conditions, the
     cannabis  was  "cultivated  for  psychoactive  purposes," says Russo.

    ===

    (17) SWISS ENSHRINE LEGAL HEROIN PROGRAM

    Pubdate: Mon, 01 Dec 2008
    Source: Toronto Star (CN ON)
    Copyright: 2008 The Toronto Star
    Author: Alexander G. Higgins, Associated Press

    Voters  Endorse  Drugs-For-Addicts  Measure  While  Rejecting  Bid  To
    Decriminalize Marijuana

    GENEVA-The  world's  most  comprehensive  legalized  heroin  program
    became  permanent  yesterday  with  overwhelming  approval  from Swiss
    voters  who  also  rejected  the  decriminalization  of  marijuana.

    The  heroin  program, started in 1994, is offered in 23 centres across
    Switzerland.  It  has  helped eliminate scenes of large groups of drug
    users  shooting  up in parks that marred Swiss cities in the 1980s and
    1990s.  The  plan  is  credited  with reducing crime and improving the
    health and daily lives of addicts.

     [snip]

    The  United  States  and  the  UN  narcotics board have criticized the
    program  for  potentially  fuelling  drug  abuse, but it has attracted
    attention  from  other governments, which in recent years have started
    or  are  considering  their  own  programs  modelled  on  the  system.

    The  Netherlands  started  a  program  in  2006 that serves nearly 600
    patients.  Britain  has allowed individual doctors to prescribe heroin
    since  the  1920s,  and  has  been running trials similar to the Swiss
    approach  in  recent  years.  Belgium,  Germany,  Spain and Canada are
    running trial programs too.

     [snip]

    Continues: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v08.n1081.a02.html

    ===

    (18) HOLLAND BANS MAGIC MUSHROOMS

    Pubdate: Sat, 29 Nov 2008
    Source: Edmonton Journal (CN AB)
    Copyright: 2008 Reuters

    Country Attempting to Shed Its 'Anything-Goes' Image

    AMSTERDAM  -  The Netherlands will ban the sale and cultivation of all
    hallucinogenic  "magic"  mushrooms  next  week, the latest target of a
    country seeking to shed its "anything goes" image.

    The  Dutch  government proposed the ban in April, citing the dangerous
    behavioural  effects  of  magic  mushrooms  following  the  death of a
    French  teenager  who  jumped  from  an Amsterdam bridge in 2007 after
    consuming the hallucinogenic fungus.

    "The  use  of magic mushrooms has hallucinogenic effects. It is proven
    that  this  can  lead to unpredictable and therefore risky behaviour,"
    the Dutch Health Ministry said in a statement.

    A  challenge  to  the  ban  was  rejected  by  a court in the Hague on
    Friday.  From  Monday, the production or sale of fresh magic mushrooms
    could  lead  to a maximum jail sentence of four years, a spokesman for
    the Dutch Justice Ministry said on Friday.

     [snip]

    Some  proponents  of  magic  mushrooms  say  that  their  use  aids in
    spiritual awareness, gaining personal insight.

     [snip]

    Continues: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v08.n1073.a04.html

    ===

    (19) CANNABIS CAUTIONS SOAR BY 150%

    Pubdate: Wed, 26 Nov 2008
    Source: Lancashire Evening Post (UK)
    Copyright: 2008 Lancashire Evening Post
    Author: Chris Visser

    The  number  of  cautions  issued  for  cannabis use in Lancashire has
    rocketed by 151% in 12 months.

    Figures  released  in  Westminster  show  that there were 528 cannabis
    warnings  issued  by Lancashire Police in 2007/08 compared to just 210
    the previous year.

    The  revelation  comes  after peers spoke out in the House of Lords to
    support  delaying  government  plans  to upgrade cannabis from Class C
    to  Class  B  after  it  was  opposed  by  the Advisory Council on the
    Misuse of Drugs.

     [snip]

    Talking  of  the  Lancashire  figures,  Don  Barnard  of  the Legalise
    Cannabis  Alliance,  said:  "The  police  should be spending more time
    looking  for  real crime as opposed to busting people for a little bit
    of dope when they are not doing real harm.

    "I  find  it  absolutely  horrendous  that  people are being cautioned
    like  this.  I'm  quite  surprised at the figures when you are hearing
    from Home Secretary Jacqui Smith that there is no progress.

    "I  think  there  are  a substantial number of people growing cannabis
    for medical reasons and they are getting cautions."

    Continues: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v08.n1069.a04.html

    ===

    (20) RESEARCHERS HIGH ON ANCIENT POT FIND

    Pubdate: Fri, 28 Nov 2008
    Source: Chronicle Herald (CN NS)
    Copyright: 2008 The Halifax Herald Limited
    Author: Dean Beeby, Canadian Press

    OTTAWA  -  Researchers  say they have located the world's oldest stash
    of marijuana, in a tomb in a remote part of China.

    The  cache  of  cannabis  is  about  2,700  years  old and was clearly
    "cultivated  for  psychoactive  purposes,"  rather  than  as fibre for
    clothing  or  as  food,  says  a  research  paper  in  the  Journal of
    Experimental Botany.

    The  789  grams of dried cannabis was buried alongside a light-haired,
    blue-eyed  Caucasian  man,  likely a shaman of the Gushi culture, near
    Turpan in northwestern China.

    The extremely dry conditions and alkaline soil acted as
    preservatives,  allowing  a  team  of  scientists to carefully analyze
    the  stash,  which  still  looked  green  although  it  had  lost  its
    distinctive odour.

    "To our knowledge, these investigations provide the oldest
    documentation  of  cannabis as a pharmacologically active agent," says
    the  newly  published paper, whose lead author is American neurologist
    Dr. Ethan B. Russo.

     [snip]

    The  marijuana  was  found  to  have a relatively high content of THC,
    the  main  active  ingredient  in cannabis, but the sample was too old
    to determine a precise percentage.

     [snip]

    Continues: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v08.n1072.a09.html

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

    HOT OFF THE 'NET
    -------------------------------

    PROHIBITION ENDED 75 YEARS AGO, BUT WHAT HAVE WE LEARNED?

    By Rob Kampia, Marijuana Policy Project

    It's  time  to  bring marijuana under responsible controls and end the
    monopoly we've handed to gangsters.

    http://drugsense.org/url/a3t4Vxpl

    ===

    LEGAL EASE WITH KIRK TOUSAW

    Criminal  lawyer  Kirk  Tousaw  discusses  four legal battles that are
    raging in the war on the War on Cannabis in Canada.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MUQfFC8ZDdA

    ===

    DRUG TRUTH NETWORK

    Century of Lies - 12/02/08 - Kevin Zeese

    Kevin  Zeese,  president of Common Sense for Drug Policy regarding the
    financial  impact  of the drug war and the US financial fiasco + Terry
    Nelson  reports for Law Enforcement Against Prohibition + "commercial"
    for the Uri-Liminator!

    http://www.drugtruth.net/cms/?q=node/2158

    Cultural Baggage Radio Show - 12/03/08 - Terry Nelson

    Law  Enforcement Against Prohibition press conference at the National
    Press  Club  in  Wash  DC, call for the end of drug prohibition, with
    Neal  Peirce  of  Wash  Post,  Terry  Nelson  & Richard Van Wickler of
    LEAP & Eric Sterling of Criminal Justice Policy Foundation.

    http://www.drugtruth.net/cms/?q=node/2159

    ===

    MULTIDISCIPLINARY  ASSOCIATION  FOR  PSYCHEDELIC  STUDIES  BULLETIN

    The  Winter  2008  -  2009 MAPS Bulletin is now available online as a
    single PDF file.

    http://www.maps.org/news-letters/v18n3/v18n3-maps_bulletin_winter_2008.pdf

    ===

    BLACK POLICE ASSOCIATION WRITES TO OBAMA TO OPPOSE RAMSTAD

    A  coalition  of  advocacy  and nonprofit organizations, including the
    National  Black  Police Association, sent a letter today to President-
    elect Barack Obama preemptively pushing back against the nomination of
    Rep. James Ramstad (R-Minn.) to be head of the Office of National Drug
    Control Policy, or "Drug Czar."

    http://drugsense.org/url/1QZjOp5b

    ===

    GENETIC ANALYSES OF ANCIENT CANNABIS FROM CENTRAL ASIA

    The  Yanghai  Tombs  near  Turpan,  Xinjiang-Uighur Autonomous Region,
    China  have  recently been excavated to reveal the 2700-year-old grave
    of  a  Caucasoid  shaman whose accoutrements included a large cache of
    cannabis,  superbly  preserved  by  climatic  and  burial  conditions.

    http://jxb.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/full/59/15/4171

    ===

    LEAP SPEAKER NEILL FRANKLIN DISCUSSES ENDING PROHIBITION
       
    Former  Maryland  State Police Maj. Neill Franklin on Fox News on the
    75th  anniversary  of  the  repeal  of alcohol prohibition discussing
    ending the war on drugs.

    http://www.leap.cc/cms/index.php?name=Web_Links&l_op=visit&lid=177

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

    WHAT YOU CAN DO THIS WEEK
    --------------------------------------------------

    TAKE ACTION TO END TODAY'S FAILED PROHIBITION

    December  is  the  75th  anniversary of when America's leaders had the
    good  sense  to  end  alcohol  prohibition.  Today,  we  have  another
    ineffective,  harmful  and  expensive prohibition, the "war on drugs."
    LEAP  has made it easy for you to take action and let your legislators
    know  that  we can't afford prohibition in these tough economic times.

    Visit http://www.wecandoitagain.com/ for more information.

    ===

    APPLY FOR A JOB WITH MPP

    The  Marijuana  Policy  Project, the nation's largest marijuana policy
    reform  organization,  is  seeking  a  Communications Assistant, to be
    based  in  the  organization's  main  office  in Washington, D.C. This
    position  is  an  excellent  opportunity to play an integral role in a
    fast-paced, well-respected advocacy organization.

    The Communications Assistant works in MPP's Communications Department,
    which  is  responsible  for effectively communicating MPP's message to
    the  media  and  the  public  through  written  materials  and  media
    relations.

    To apply, please see MPP's application guidelines at
    http://www.mpp.org/jobs/process.html

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

    LETTER OF THE WEEK
    ------------------------------------

    POT ISN'T DANGEROUS

    By David R. Ford

    I'm  adding  a  few  words regarding Chief Mahuna's comments about the
    voter-approved pot initiative.

    The  government  has  not  been  able  to  prove  one toxicity related
    death,  ever,  from  marijuana.  Compare that to alcohol, nicotine and
    pharmaceutical  products  that  together  cause the death of more than
    600,000  Americans  annually!  The  government continues to claim that
    marijuana  has  no  medical value, and consequently it is a controlled
    Schedule  I  drug, along with heroin, too dangerous to prescribe! That
    makes  as  much  sense  as  having  Dracula  guard our blood bank. I'm
    offering  the  DEA $1 million cash if it can prove its charge that pot
    has no medical value.

    In  1995,  after  30  years  of  scientific  research,  editors of the
    respected  British  medical  journal Lancet concluded, "The smoking of
    cannabis,  even  long  term,  is  not  harmful to health." Marijuana's
    only danger is arrest for possession.

    If  it's  not  dangerous,  why  is  it prohibited medicine? Because an
    herb  cannot  be patented, making it a threat to alcohol, nicotine and
    pharmaceutical  companies  who  pay Uncle Sam billions in taxes! Uncle
    is  the  protector of those death-causing drugs. Marijuana prohibition
    is  caused  by  ignorance,  arrogance,  politics, greed, power, money,
    lies,  perjury  and  shameful  government betrayal against the world's
    safest medicine, and high.

    The  DEA's  own  judge  Young,  after two years of researching medical
    marijuana,  stated:  "Marijuana,  in  its  natural form, is one of the
    safest  therapeutically  active  substances  known to man." I have two
    major books on this subject. See Amazon.com.

    David R.  Ford
    Sonoma, Calif.

    Pubdate: Sun, 23 Nov 2008
    Source: Hawaii Tribune Herald (Hilo, HI)
    Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v08.n1031.a10.html

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

    LETTER WRITER OF THE MONTH - NOVEMBER
    -----------------------------------------------------------------------

    DrugSense  recognizes  Russell  Barth  of  Napean,  Ontario for his 15
    letters  published  during  November,  bringing his total that we know
    of  to  478  -  an  increase  of  101 published letters since November
    2007.  Russell  frequently  includes  'Federally  licensed  medical
    marijuana  user'  and  'Patients  Against Ignorance and Discrimination
    on Cannabis' in his letter signature block.

    You may read all of his published letters at
    http://www.mapinc.org/writers/Russell+Barth

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

    FEATURE ARTICLE
    -------------------------------

    20  Points  Regarding  Drug  Prohibition  And  Political  Corruption

    By Stephen Young

    1.  Is  there  a  connection  between  drug  prohibition and political
    corruption?  Before  exploring  that  question,  it's  important  to
    remember  that  correlation  does  not  equal  causation.  But certain
    minds may draw lines between certain points.

    2.  The  State  of  Illinois, where I live, is notorious for political
    corruption.  Our  previous  Republican governor is currently in prison
    for his misdeeds.

    3.  Ongoing  federal  investigations  are  inching  closer our current
    governor  (a  Democrat),  with  one  of his top fund-raisers currently
    serving  time.  Another  investigation  near  the  current  governor
    involves  a  financial  contributor  accused  of taking state funds to
    perform  drug  tests  for the state, but then failing to perform those
    drug tests.

    4.  Legislators  in Illinois rarely resist the lure of anti-drug laws.
    Just  last  year  new  enhanced  marijuana  growing  penalties  were
    adopted, despite the existence of already harsh laws.

    5.  Illinois  has  a useless medical marijuana law that was adopted in
    the  late  1970s.  It  remains  on  the  books, but it offers no legal
    protection or supply for users.

    6.  Legislators  in Illinois like to pretend that medical marijuana is
    a  controversial  issue  that  could  hurt  them  at  election time. A
    proposed  medical  marijuana  bill  that might actually help users has
    been  kicked  around  committees  in  the  legislature  for  several
    sessions.  The  original  sponsor,  who  suffered from AIDS, has since
    died.

    7.  While  the  medical  marijuana  bill  has  languished,  Illinois
    Democrats  have  held  the  Senate,  the House, the Governor's mansion
    and just about every other position of power in the state,
    recklessly pushing the state deeper into debt. Still, many
    legislators  from  both parties say they favor propaganda over science
    when  it  comes to medical cannabis. Furthermore, they suggest serious
    political  fallout  could  come  from  supporting  medical  marijuana.

    8.  The  medical marijuana voter initiative that passed in neighboring
    Michigan  last  month  was  approved  by a majority in every county in
    the  state.  Not  a surprise, as opinion polls show consistent general
    support for medical marijuana, even in Illinois.

    9.  I  spoke  with  Barrack  Obama  on  the phone very briefly about a
    decade  ago.  I was working as a newspaper reporter and he was a state
    senator  co-sponsoring  a bill that was supposed to reign in political
    corruption  in  Illinois  (the  bill was called "The Gift Ban Act"). I
    left  a  message  seeking  comment,  but  Sen.  Obama didn't call back
    until  a  week  after the story was published. He said there must have
    been  some  confusion  in  the  office  and  that  he  just missed the
    message  until  that  point. I was busy working on something else when
    he  called,  so  I said it was too late. By that point in my career, I
    knew  that  if  a  politician  wanted  to  be quoted on an issue, they
    returned the call immediately. If not, they wouldn't.

    9.  The  Gift  Ban  Act  was  challenged on constitutional grounds and
    eventually  replaced  with  other  legislation.  Corruption  remains
    embedded  in  Illinois  political culture as evidenced by points 2 and
    3 above.

    10.  One  of  Barrack  Obama's  final  bills  to  be pushed though the
    Illinois  legislature  before  he  started  his  campaign for the U.S.
    Senate  banned  the  herbal drug ephedra. Unlike the Gift Ban Act, the
    ephedra ban stuck.

    11.  The  former Republican governor who is now serving time in prison
    once  vetoed  a  bill that would have allowed educational institutions
    to  study  industrial  hemp  in Illinois. He said he worried about the
    message  being  sent  to  people  with drug problems. Taking kickbacks
    from many - including, allegedly, at least one anti-drug
    organization - apparently did not send the wrong message.

    12.  Every  autumn,  state  police  use  state helicopters to look for
    marijuana  fields.  More  often  than  not  they find wild hemp fields
    that  don't  produce  intoxicants.  The  officers  burn  those  fields
    anyway. The wild hemp returns the next year.

    13.  Over  the  past  several years, Illinois has made at least 40,000
    marijuana arrests annually.

    14.  Political  corruption  arrests  happen  in  the  state,  but they
    certainly don't happen by the thousand.

    15.  In  Illinois,  the  political  system  almost  always  works  for
    powerful  special  interests,  rarely  for  the little guy. Last week,
    citing  budget  problems,  the  current  governor  shut  down  several
    public  parks  and  historic sites used by common people. There was no
    talk  of  plans to stop using helicopter fuel and police time to torch
    non-intoxicating weeds.

    16.  Nor  was there talk of how medical marijuana generates revenue in
    some  states,  and  how  hemp  generates  revenue  in  some countries.

    17.  It's  not difficult to appreciate the attractiveness of drug laws
    for  corrupt  politicians.  Keeping  the  law  enforcement  apparatus
    permanently  trained  on  an issue like illegal drugs, which permeates
    our  culture,  makes  every  citizen  is  a suspect (hence the alleged
    need for drug tests at work and school).

    18.  If  law  enforcement has to worry about anyone ingesting cannabis
    at  any  time,  even  with  a  doctor's  recommendation,  how many law
    enforcement resources will ever be available to investigate
    political corruption?

    19.  In  Illinois,  watch  for  the influence of special interests and
    political  cronies  to  see bills actually turn into laws. Who are the
    special interests who keep pushing drug prohibition?

    20.  Or  are  the politicians themselves the special interests in this
    case?

    Stephen  Young  is  an  editor with DrugSense Weekly and author of the
    book How To Inhale The Universe Without Wheezing.

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

    QUOTE OF THE WEEK
    ------------------------------------

    "Once,  during  Prohibition,  I was forced to live for days on nothing
    but food and water." - W.C. Fields

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

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