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Restore-Digest Sunday, June 23
2002 Volume 2002 : Number 115
Today's Restore Hemp News OR:
'Funny Farm' Pot Operation Shut Down
US: It's NORML to Smoke Pot CA: County Works On Medical Pot Rules Canada: Marijuana 'warrior' gets 18 months IA: Onward, Marijuana Warrior! CA: Brian Epis: SAC ASA ALL DAY RALLY NJ: Blowin' Smoke US: A New Leaf Date: Sat, 22 Jun 2002 09:48:30 -0700 Subject:OR: 'Funny Farm' Pot Operation Shut Down Up TOC Newshawk: Ric Pubdate: Fri, 21 Jun 2002 Source: Seattle Post-Intelligencer (WA) Webpage: http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/local/75525_marijuana21.shtml Copyright: 2002 Seattle Post-Intelligencer Contact: editpage@seattle-pi.com Website: http://www.seattle-pi.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/408 Author: Associated Press 'FUNNY FARM' POT OPERATION SHUT DOWN Two Who Grew Medicinal Marijuana Given Probation BEND, Ore. -- Two men who grew marijuana for people with AIDS have been sentenced to probation by a Deschutes County judge. Eugene Stanley Carsey, 59, and Michael Keith Craven, 57, were sentenced Wednesday after pleading guilty to delivering marijuana and frequenting a place where marijuana was sold, respectively. Carsey and Craven run a roadside attraction called the Funny Farm, which bills itself as a "park and playground of reuse and recycling." They are also the founders of the Central Oregon AIDS Support Team. The two men were arrested on Feb. 26 after police found evidence of a commercial marijuana sales operation on their property, including 3 1/2 pounds of the drug. Carsey said later that about half the so-called marijuana seized was actually catnip. Oregon voters passed a medical marijuana law in 1998 that allows certain patients, with a state permit, to use marijuana to ease their symptoms But Carsey said it is difficult for people with AIDS and other diseases to get marijuana prescriptions in Central Oregon. Carsey was sentenced to three years of probation and 200 hours of community service; Craven to one year of probation and 80 hours of community service. Other charges against the men were dropped in a plea deal. __________________________________________________________________________ Distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake ** web: http://www.crrh.org/ ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 22 Jun 2002 09:51:12 -0700 Subject:US: It's NORML to Smoke Pot Up TOC Newshawk: It's NORML to Smoke Pot http://www.norml.org/ Pubdate: Thu, 20 Jun 2002 Source: Desert Post Weekly, The (Cathedral City, CA) Copyright: 2002 The Desert Post Weekly Contact: mdecrini@palmspri.gannett.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2248 Author: Lanny Swerdlow, Desert Post Weekly Note: For another report see http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v02/n898/a05.html Also: Conference videos http://www.norml.org/index.cfm?Group_ID=5282 Photos http://www.norml.org/index.cfm?Group_ID=5254 Photos by MAPsters http://www.drugsense.org/pix/norml2002/ Cited: Human Rights and the Drug War http://www.hr95.org/ Oakland Cannabis Buyer's Cooperative http://www.rxcbc.org/ Los Angeles Cannabis Club http://www.lacbc.org High Times http://www.hightimes.com/ Drug Policy Alliance http://www.drugpolicy.org Schaeffer Commission http://www.druglibrary.org/schaffer/library/studies/nc/ncmenu.htm Canadian Foundation for Drug Policy http://www.cfdp.ca/ Drug Research Center of the University of Amsterdam http://www.cedro-uva.org/ Journal of Cannabis Therapeutics http://www.acmed.org/science/jcant.htm IT'S NORML TO SMOKE POT San Francisco is the most pot friendly large city in the country, so it is no surprise that the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws (NORML) held its national convention there on April 18-20. Over 570 people from all walks of life streamed to the Crowne Plaza Union Square Hotel to hear speakers from State Senator John Vasconcellos to the host of ABC-TV's Politically Incorrect Bill Maher. Demanding that the government lay off pot smokers, mothers decried the arrest of their children, medicinal marijuana users heralded its beneficial properties, civil libertarians denounced the violations of the constitution and pot smokers praised the plant for its enjoyable effects and the lack of harm of any significant extent. So what is a "pot" convention like? Like any other convention with speeches, panel discussions, rubber chicken luncheons, exhibition booths, tons of brochures and parties. Of course, the parties were a little different as there was very little alcohol consumption. Instead people in suits and ties, elegant dresses, GQ casual, Hollywood chic, jeans and t-shirts and even a few died in the wool 60's style tie-dye long hairs passed around joints and pipes with the herb that humans have been using since before we were human. DAY I In a room filled to capacity, Keith Stroup, founder and executive director of NORML, welcomed the attendees as he stood next to large reproductions of NORML's $500,000 print, broadcast and outdoor advertising campaign. The campaign features New York's newly elected Mayor Michael Bloomberg and his candid admission that he smoked pot and "enjoyed it." Stroup's call for pot smokers to come out of the closet set the tone for a conference featuring advocates for legalization, medicinal use and respect for individual rights. Following Keith Stroup, was the conventions keynote speaker, San Francisco District Attorney Terence Hallinan. In 1996, he was the only district attorney in the entire state of California to endorse Proposition 215 which legalized medicinal marijuana. As District Attorney, Hallinan opposes prosecution for marijuana possession and follows a policy to not seek prison sentences for any marijuana conviction. Pointing out the inconsistency that it required a constitutional amendment to ban alcohol and only a legislative vote to ban marijuana, Hallinan informed the audience that "to consider marijuana in the same category as heroin and crack cocaine, as federal statues do, makes no sense and does not reflect reality." A video message was then shown from Minnesota Governor Jesse Ventura, a long-time advocate of marijuana decriminalization, congratulating NORML on the convention and to "show my support for the good work you are doing." The convention's first panel discussed the need to inform the public about marijuana and marijuana users. Mikki Norris, founder of the American Hemp Council and co-creator of the award-winning photo exhibit Human Rights and the Drug War, brought the delegates to their feet when she exclaimed "I want to see a time when we are judged on the content of our character, not our urine." Featured on the panel was Information Technology entrepreneur John Gilmore. Coming out publicly, Gilmore declared "I'm a millionaire. I smoke pot." Willing to put his money where he puts his joints, he has pledged to fund NORML's efforts to end marijuana prohibition to the tune of one million dollars a year for ten years. Claiming the use of marijuana is widespread by "techies" he chided the many pot smoking high tech entrepreneurs for not supporting NORML and other drug law reform organizations. Panel number two presented the latest information on drug testing. The panel's moderator, Dr. John Morgan of the CUNY Medical School, pointed to the 30,000 forensic drug tests undergone by Americans every day creating a two and a half billion dollar a year "urine testing industrial empire." With the recent Drug Enforcement Administration busts of medical marijuana providers, the panel on Patient Support Groups was full of fire and indignation. The panel featured a trio of providers at the center of the storm. Jeff Jones, director of the Oakland Cannabis Buyer's Cooperative, discussed the nationwide attention his organization received last May when the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that the club could not use medical necessity as a defense against federal law for distributing medicinal marijuana as allowed by California's Proposition 215. Also on the panel was Dr. Mollie Fry, director of the California Medical Research Center, who denounced the theft of her patient's medical records by the DEA. Scott Imler, director of the Los Angeles Cannabis Club told how, over a six-hour period, DEA agents seized all their records and equipment including the horticultural equipment used to produce medicinal marijuana for their patients. HBO is producing a documentary on the club and the impact the raid had on the club's almost 1,000 patients, the majority of them suffering from complications due to AIDS. The following panel on the Continuing Legal Battles Over the Medical Use of Marijuana amplified the callousness and indifference of our local, state and federal governments to laws enacted by the electorate that they do not approve. Don Abrahamson, Legal Counsel for the Drug Policy Alliance, discussed how the unrelenting efforts by the Justice Department to censure any discussion between doctors and their patients violates the first amendment with its threats to revoke the prescription writing authority of any doctor recommending marijuana. David Nicks, who serves on NORML's legal committee and has represented many of the medicinal marijuana providers targeted by the Justice Department, discussed upcoming court battles. As part of the defense strategy, he will be introducing recently discovered government files that prove a conspiracy by government prosecutors and law enforcement officials to circumvent and thwart the requirements of Proposition 215, thereby violating the very laws that they have been sworn to uphold. A reception and award ceremony hosted by High Times magazine featured San Francisco City Supervisor Mark Leno. During the reception a fire alarm went off caused by the smoke from a couple pot aficionados cloistered in a hallway. An electronic voice told everyone to immediately vacate the premises by way of the nearest stairway. The celebrating crowd new all too well what had really happened and continued to gather round tables heaped with a variety of hotel style hors d'oeuvres as they feted many of the major players in the marijuana law reform movement. So ended the first day. DAY II The troops returned to convention headquarters at 8:30 a.m.to hear State Senator John Vasconcellos, chief sponsor of Senate Bill 187. This landmark legislation would set up a statewide registry and establish guidelines for medical marijuana patients under Proposition 215. Having passed both the assembly and senate, the bill only awaits the governor's signature. Senator Vasconcellos urged supporters to "hold rallies, circulate petitions, contact Davis contributors and appointees and urge them to let the governor know they want him to sign the bill." The senator pointed out that "marijuana is benign, yet it is portrayed as the end of the world. It represents a cultural war against the 60's, which opened us up to each other. Marijuana is the symbol for freedom, democracy and opportunity." The first panel of the day featured a look back at the 1972 Schaeffer Commission report on Marijuana and Drug Abuse. Featured on the panel was Tom Ungerleider, a member of the commission who discussed the report's history and how the commission came to recommend the decriminalization of marijuana. Although President Nixon had appointed every member of the commission, he denounced the commission's finding and then launched the Drug War that still plagues America today. The following panel was a look at the policies on marijuana followed by Canada and Western Europe. Eugene Oscapella from the Canadian Foundation for Drug Policy stated that Canadian laws on marijuana are considerably less harsh resulting in a "rate of incarceration for marijuana offenses that is one-sixth of the U.S. rate." He denounced the paid DEA informants operating surreptitiously in Canada as violating his country's laws and sovereignty. Peter Cohen, from the Drug Research Center of the University of Amsterdam, spoke of the movement away from prohibitionist drug policies to ones incorporating harm reduction throughout Western Europe. Discussing the various legal reforms to decriminalize marijuana, he singled out Portugal as one of the most progressive which "on July1, 2000 decriminalized all drugs making use and possession subject only to administrative sanctions." From tips on how to camouflage your crops to how to find a good lawyer, the next panel entitled "Avoiding a Pot Bust and Surviving If You Are Busted" presented down to earth information on current law enforcement techniques to ensnare pot smokers. As panelist Jeff Steinborn pointed out, "if you are smoking pot, you are being hunted like a deer." A panel of distinguished medical researchers and doctors comprised the day's final panel and centered on "Marijuana and Health - Both The Risks and Benefits." Leading off the discussion was Dr. Ethan Russo, editor of the Journal of Cannabis Therapeutics. His research with smokers who utilized medicinal marijuana furnished by the United States Government demonstrated that they suffered no significant harmful side effects from their daily use of this medicine over periods ranging from ten to fifteen years. During his presentation he noted that marijuana not only provided relief from their debilitating symptoms, but also enabled these patients to use significantly fewer prescription drugs. Another panelist, Dr. Donald Abrams, Professor of Clinical Medicine at the University of California at San Francisco, recounted the difficulty he encountered attempting to get marijuana from the U.S. government to conduct his studies. Finally after several years, he was able to obtain marijuana and conducted the study. In addition to finding that marijuana had no negative interactions with any of the AIDS "cocktail" drugs, he found conclusively that medicinal marijuana would affect weight gain in men suffering AIDS Wasting Syndrome. A distinguished AIDS research specialist, Dr. Abrams' research has been published in a multitude of medical journals including the American Journal of Clinical Pathology and the Journal of American Medical Association, but his research utilizing marijuana has been rejected by three journals. "Its all politics," he says, "just politics." DAY III In an attempt to demonstrate that marijuana law reform is not just supported by those old wacky hippie communal pot freaks, the first panel in the morning was entitled "Left and Right Agree on Ending Medical Marijuana Prohibition." Featured on the panel was nationally syndicated columnist and author Barbara Ehrenreich. A left-wing progressive she argues that the War On Drugs is actually "a war on poor people and people of color." Pulling no punches, she noted that the upper echelons in business don't take drug tests explaining "you squat and pee so you know where you are in the corporate hierarchy." Joseph McNamara is a research fellow at the Hoover Institute, a conservative libertarian think tank located on the campus of Stanford University. As the Chief of Police in the cities of San Jose and Kansas City, he was speaking from first hand experience when he said "police are indoctrinated to hate drug users and see them as the enemy." His Libertarian philosophy was evident when he explained, "in the first 140 years of our country, you could ingest any drug. I want to restore the freedom of those first 140 years." His understanding that the War On Drugs was more than just politics was made clear by his statement that "the drug war is a holy war and in a holy war you don't have to win - you just keep fighting." A panel of industrial hemp producers and hemp-product manufacturers discussed the many uses of hemp and noted that many countries, including our neighbor to the north, allow its farmers a significant cash crop by allowing them to cultivate and harvest industrial hemp. David Frankel, lawyer and industrial hemp activist decried how the U.S. Justice Department is pulling the rug out from under this fledging industry by "creating legal technicalities to criminalize people." Always crowded throughout the conference, the hotel's cavernous ballroom was filled with a capacity exceeding standing room only crowd anxious to hear Bill Maher, host of ABC's controversial program Politically Incorrect. A long-time advocate for ending marijuana prohibition, Maher called for "the vast silent majority" of pot smokers to awaken the public and insisting on a new attitude when he noted that "pot people are tolerant and open minded. We should be intolerant." Alluding to the on-going scandal of sex abuse in the Catholic Church, Maher protested that hundreds of thousands of pot smokers are in jail, but "no cop ever kicked in a rectory door." Not holding back, Maher exclaimed that he "can't forgive Bush and Gore for their hypocrisy." Embarrassed by his colleagues who toke but don't help, he deadpanned that "I don't want to mention any names, like Harrison Ford and Ted Turner," as he lashed out at the rich and famous for their refusal to stand up and end their own personal hypocrisy. Racing up to a thundering finish, the audience rose to its feet cheering as Maher declared "unless people start dying, it won't become legal, so I volunteer to be the first victim. Somebody kill me with pot tonight." Appropriately following Maher was a panel entitled "Growing Your Own Medicine" and featured expert marijuana cultivators. Although hosting such a panel could bring the IRS down on NORML, Anthony Feldstein of NORML's Legal Committee outlined the legal issues surrounding marijuana cultivation with special emphasis on California's Proposition 215. Focusing on indoor cultivation, Chris Conrad, Bobby B. and Kyle Kushman discussed cultivation, costs and camouflage. The panel on "Future Leaders" was an appropriate ending panel. Kris Krane, NORML's national chapter coordinator proclaimed "ending the drug war is this generation's new anti-war movement," and then presented students and youth leaders from Florida to Washington to prove it. In addition to calling for an end to marijuana prohibition, the panelists describing themselves as "the DARE generation" and "the Turn In Your Parents Generation" called for an end to denying students financial aid because of prior drug convictions, an end to student drug testing and a boycott of companies that engage in drug testing. Taking a view towards all of society, LeeAnn Ilminen from the Univeristy of Minnesota in St. Cloud called for more women to become involved, as "women are the fastest growing segment of non-violent drug offenders in jail." One of the few minority representatives at the conference, African-American civil rights activist Van Jones, challenged the assembled audience and the youthful panelists by declaring "when you end the prohibition of drugs, end the prohibition of jobs, end the prohibition of clean air and water, then you will be the greatest generation." Encapsulating the essence of the conference in his closing remarks, NORML Executive Director Keith Stroups told the cheering, emboldened audience to take these messages home to their families, friends and colleagues. "We are part of the human rights movement. We must come out of the closet. We will have zero tolerance towards those who want to arrest marijuana smokers. And foremost, this is a fight about personal freedom." __________________________________________________________________________ Distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake ** web: http://www.crrh.org/ ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 22 Jun 2002 09:52:22 -0700 Subject:CA: County Works On Medical Pot Rules Up TOC Newshawk: The War on Drugs IS Terrorism Pubdate: Wed, 19 Jun 2002 Source: Tahoe Daily Tribune (CA) Contact: tribune@tahoe.com Copyright: 2002 Tahoe Daily Tribune Website: http://www.tahoedailytribune.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/443 Author: Gregory Crofton, Tribune staff writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?115 (Cannabis - California) COUNTY WORKS ON MEDICAL POT RULES Expect new possession guidelines for medical marijuana patients and their providers by mid-July, said El Dorado County District Attorney Gary Lacy. Lacy, who is running for re-election this fall, and a sheriff's captain met with medical marijuana advocates in Placerville on Monday night for a third time to discuss how much pot would be too much for patients and caregivers, or pot providers, to possess. "We have just about got guidelines for indoor and outdoor," Lacy said. "We're awaiting Dale Schafer's proposal that will apply to caregivers." Schafer, an attorney and a losing candidate for district attorney in the March primary, said he expects to have his suggestions to Lacy on amounts for caregivers by Friday. He said his proposal will not ask law enforcement to allow more than 99 plants. Schafer, who also runs a medical marijuana clinic in the county with his wife, Dr. Molly Fry, said any number greater than 99 is asking for trouble from the federal government. "At 100 plants, there is a federal sentencing guideline of five years in prison," he said. "I don't advise anybody to go over 99 plants. If you do, you better put a lot of money away for an attorney and put your affairs in order cause you're going to prison." ** web: http://www.crrh.org/ ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 22 Jun 2002 09:52:52 -0700 Subject:Canada: Marijuana 'warrior' gets 18 months Up TOC Newshawk: http://www.medicalmarihuana.ca/ Pubdate: Saturday, June 22, 2002 Source: Ottawa Citizen (CN ON) Website: http://www.canada.com/ottawa/ottawacitizen/ Address: P.O. Box 5020, 1101 Baxter Rd., Ottawa, ON K2C 3M4 Contact: letters@thecitizen.southam.ca Webpage: http://www.mapinc.org/cancom/D7C6E15A-97F7-40D3-BBDB-23A16D34FF0A Marijuana 'warrior' gets 18 months Plants were intended for medicinal purposes, Turmel tells court The Ottawa Citizen Medicinal marijuana activist Raymond Turmel, a self-described "warrior for marijuana," lost his battle yesterday when he was sentenced to 18 months' detention for possessing and cultivating the drug with intent to traffic. "I told the judge: 'Give me life or send me home to my wife,'" said Mr. Turmel before he headed into court in Gatineau. But Superior Court Justice Jean-Pierre Plouffe gave him neither yesterday in a decision at the end of a very public trial. In July 2000, Mr. Turmel was arrested after police raided his Hull apartment and found 450 marijuana seedlings and 153 mature plants. Mr. Turmel said the marijuana -- which the Crown testified could yield between 30,000 and 60,000 joints -- was used medicinally and distributed to his chronically ill wife, his mother, who was a cancer patient, and a neighbour with back pain. His wife, Denise Beaudoin, testified she smoked five or six joints a day -- more than 2,000 a year -- to ease chronic pain caused by a 1998 car accident. Mr. Turmel was found guilty of the charges in November. The judge told the court he decided against a conditional sentence because the charges against Mr. Turmel were aggravated by several factors, the most serious being a previous conviction in 1992 for intention to traffic cocaine. Mr. Justice Plouffe also cited "the large quantity involved in this sophisticated and large-scale operation," as well as Mr. Turmel's "way of life" and his likelihood of recidivism. Mr. Turmel, who acted as his own counsel throughout the trial, has already prepared an appeal. "This is a war to legalize marijuana and I'm one of the front-line warriors," he said. Quebec Crown prosecutor Anouk Desaulniers had recommended a 20-month sentence based on Mr. Turmel's previous convictions going back to 1990. "There is a risk that he will reoffend, given that he has not yet grasped why what he did was illegal," Ms. Desaulniers said. Mr. Turmel's mother and daughter, who attended the sentencing, were not pleased. "They say my dad is a danger to society, but I know he's not," said Marie-Eve, 18. During the trial, Mr. Turmel said he and his wife had tried, and failed, to obtain permission to use and grow medicinal marijuana under Health Canada's Medical Marijuana Access Regulations, which came into effect August 2001. ** web: http://www.crrh.org/ ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 22 Jun 2002 09:54:03 -0700 Subject:IA: Onward, Marijuana Warrior! Up TOC Newshawk: carl-olsen Pubdate: Wed, 19 Jun 2002 Source: Cityview (IA) Section: Editorial/Opinion Contact: editor@businesspublicationsdm.com Copyright: 2002 Cityview Website: http://www.dmcityview.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/572 Author: Erin Crawford, Cityview Managing Editor ONWARD, MARIJUANA WARRIOR! First, you should know that Carl Olsen stopped smoking pot 22 years ago. He didn't stop because he had a bad trip. And he didn't quit because he stopped enjoying weed. A tasty smoke is just as appealing now as it ever was. Olsen quit because he believes great strides in pot advocacy will only come from great self-sacrifice. So he laid down his pipe and took up politics. Ever since, he's been marijuana's most vocal Iowa fan. Lately, his belief that we should legalize marijuana, legalize medical marijuana and recognize drug addictions as mental illnesses has become widely accepted, hardly raising an eyebrow within the Democratic Party, where Olsen serves on the county, district and state platform committees. By using his Web site and signing people up at rock concerts, Olsen has worked to mobilize marijuana supporters. "People think marijuana turns you into a three-headed monster," he says. "Once you've used it, it's hard to believe that." (I always thought pot turned you into my friend Steve, who spent way too much time in his basement watching bootleg Asian imports of "Pulp Fiction.") At last weekend's statewide Democratic convention, language Olsen suggested - - "Recognizing substance abuse as an illness and not as criminal behavior" - - was placed within the Universal Health Care platform plank. In the end, the Universal Health Care plank, including Olsen's provision, was voted the party's No. 1 priority. But just as he's making progress on behalf of weed, he finds himself fighting a more immediate battle with The Man. Olsen recently lost his job after 12 years with the Iowa Department of Transportation's permit department. He says he was fired for mistakes he made and insubordination, but the department can't officially comment on the reasons for his dismissal. Olsen says he thinks the firing has nothing to do with his work on behalf of pot. His union is representing him, but the IDOT's first judgment was against him. His next step will be to go before a grievance resolution panel. There were a few big mistakes, Olsen says, but he claims other co-workers made similar and worse mistakes all the time. The more interesting charge is insubordination. Olsen says he was constantly working to change the permit system and make it more efficient. He thought it was ridiculous he was forced by the department's rules to sometimes send customers from office to office for services he could provide. " hey told me I was the only one who didn't understand," Olsen says. "I got really upset." Occasionally when he was talking to a customer, Olsen would complain to them about the department's bureaucracy. His bosses thought it was bad customer service, but you've got to wonder whether the government has the right to stop a citizen from criticizing it. Before he was fired, he began working with state Rep. Ed Fallon (D-Des Moines) to make changes in the system. It's a complex case, Fallon says. "It seems Carl has made some mistakes, but that's not uncommon," he says. "He's been very aggressive about telling legislators what changes could be made to improve the IDOT's service and also save money. It looks to me like it could be some retribution because of his proactive stance. ... He's made some really good points, and some have since become law." The state denies Olsen's quest to better the government has anything to do with his dismissal. Shirley Andre, director of the department's Motor Vehicle Division, says the IDOT encourages employee suggestions, and it has several systems in place to encourage suggestions. This marijuana advocate may be a party player, but he's now partly depending on the Democrats, through Fallon's assistance, to help him navigate the system and get his job back. Just as Olsen found himself in a winning position, he has to fight for his livelihood, not just his hobby. __________________________________________________________________________ Distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom ** web: http://www.crrh.org/ ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 22 Jun 2002 14:24:09 -0700 Subject:CA: Brian Epis: SAC ASA ALL DAY RALLY Up TOC Sacromento ASA is planning an all day rally before and after jury service against Fed. Court Case(Brian Epis) Staring June 24th 7:30am- after coutr. Until the trial rests. 501 I st. nurishment will be provided. : ) Thank you for your support. If you could please post this every where!! thank you!!!! - --- AmandA whittemore@angelfire.com (916) 628-2716 More info on trial: http://lindenarms.com/court/ *** There is an attachment in this mail. *** - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------Hi hope everythings going grate! Sac ASA is planning an all day rally before and after jury service against Fed. Court Case(Brian Epis) Staring June 24th 7:30am- after coutr. Until the trial rests. 501 I st. nurishment will be provided. : ) Thank you for your support. If you could please post this every where!! thank you!!!! - --- AmandA ** web: http://www.crrh.org/ ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 22 Jun 2002 15:11:16 -0700 Subject:NJ: Blowin' Smoke Up TOC Blowin' Smoke Philadelphia Weekly May 29, 2002 http://www.philadelphiaweekly.com/archives/columns.asp?IssID=81 http://www.philadelphiaweekly.com/archives/article.asp?ArtID=2375 TIM WHITAKER (twhitaker@philadelphiaweekly.com) I can hear it now. What are you guys smoking over there? Spring explodes, and the Weekly starts digging around for their stash? Well, not exactly. Fact is, there are surprisingly few tokers here (no survey taken; just an educated guess), and you'll just have to trust me that nobody walks around sporting a JUST DOOB IT! T-shirt. And while there's likely much support for at least decriminalizing marijuana--both in this office and in the city at large--no one's making much of an argument to put it on a ballot in Pennsylvania. In fact, best we know, nobody even fired any marijuana law questions at the gubernatorial candidates during the recently completed contest. There are reasons why the political and legal system fails to confront the inequities governing marijuana use. The biggest, perhaps understandably, is that our politicians fear that in even discussing the issue they'll be perceived as being in favor of drug use. This is, like, such a big drag, man. While there are important issues surrounding marijuana use and the potential repercussions for getting caught using it, the very topic of weed is--let's face it--rife with comedic potential. It's not for nothing that Cheech and Chong made a fortune. There was this guy. He was the publisher of a small fledgling publication. This was a while ago. The publisher was young and ambitious. From the time he was a kid he always worked. Twelve-hour days, often seven days a week. He wasn't real good at having fun. One day while delivering the journal he published, one of the circulation guys in the truck offered him a toke from his joint. The publisher, trying to be one of the boys, threw fate to the wind. He had never felt anything quite like this. It made him happy. He soon bought some marijuana for himself. And he began to smoke it. At first the young publisher smoked it at home late at night, but then he began smoking a little during the day too. He didn't think anyone would notice. For some reason, though, smoking dope had a strange physiological effect on this young publisher. Every time he smoked it his mouth would get dry, profoundly dry, and his upper lip would curl upwards. His lip would climb higher and higher as he spoke until eventually it would get stuck to the bottom of his nostril. Stranger yet, perhaps because he was so stoned, he never seemed to notice it was happening. It wasn't long before the entire staff noticed the publisher had this weird thing going on with his upper lip. For a while, thinking maybe it was the onslaught of some kind of unfamiliar muscle disease, everyone was quite polite about it. But the staff was young, and it was hard to get much past them. Soon there were other telltale signs that the boss had taken to toking up during the workday. He had become a little too happy, he laughed a lot, found most everything silly. Word was out: The publisher was a stoner. 0ne day the publisher decided he needed to have a staff meeting. Sales were off and morale had begun to flag. The publisher gathered all his employees--some 25 or 30 of them--into his spacious office, where he planned to give a spirited pep talk. He was a fine public speaker, and had often gone on the stump to promote his publication to advertisers and community groups. He was known for delivering inspirational orations. But unfortunately, instead of simply relying on his natural-born skills, the young publisher took a toke or three for good measure just minutes before everyone filed into his office. He began his talk smartly enough, complimenting the staff for their brilliant minds and solid work ethic. But just as he started pointing to the charts that he had made especially to show his goals for the upcoming quarter, his upper lip began to soar--slowly at first, but then, inextricably, higher and higher. And then it got stuck. When it stuck, his words became incomprehensible--and then, after a little while, he began to sound a bit like Elmer Fudd. He noticed, finally, that things weren't right, and tried to push his lip down with his finger. But a moment or two later, it would begin to soar again, and in no time he'd be back to making Fudd-like sounds. Soon the whole scene became too much for the staff to bear. The art director, guffawing uncontrollably into his hands, was the first to stumble out of the meeting. She was followed quickly by the staff photographer. Then the ad director. In short order, there was a mass exodus. None of what is written about pot in this issue should be misconstrued as promoting its use. Smoking pot can cause problems. For some, it can prove addictive and permanently blunt reality. It's expensive, it's not good for your lungs, and it can get you in trouble. And in some very rare cases, it can cause your upper lip to stick to the bottom of your nostril. Still, when used in moderation, marijuana is almost always a threat to no one. It tends to have a mellowing effect. The easiest--and most repeated argument for legalizing marijuana--is to compare its effects to those of alcohol consumption. What might be worst about marijuana are the laws that regulate it and the way those laws are enforced--which is to say, for the most part, arbitrarily. You'll read in this issue how some Philadelphia police officers believe that busting a pedestrian user on the street is a waste of time. Which is a kind of decriminalization in practice, if it weren't for the fact that enforcement is often a judgement call. Would the police feel differently if, for example, the user in question looked suspicious, or was of a specific race or ethnicity? And anyone who has seen someone get relief from chemo treatments by smoking a little pot will wonder why its use for medicinal purposes is still an issue with anybody. And finally, there are those--including a PW staffer who makes his case in our pages this week--who believe in strict enforcement of our marijuana laws. There are issues here, and it's high time we dealt with them. ------------------------------ Date: Sun, 23 Jun 2002 11:37:48 -0700 Subject:US: A New Leaf Up TOC Newshawk: Ariel Pubdate: Wed, 29 May 2002 Source: Philadelphia Weekly (PA) Copyright: 2002 Philadelphia Weekly Contact: editmail@philadelphiaweekly.com Website: http://www.phillyweekly.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1091 Author: Sara Kelly Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?323 (GW Pharmaceuticals) A NEW LEAF Getting Patients High Is The Least Of What Pot-derived Drugs Can Do Though it would be nice to think that chronic pain sufferers could at least enjoy a legal pot buzz once in a while, medicinal marijuana, with the exception of a few lucky folks grandfathered into a state-sponsored plan from the '70s, isn't really about getting wrecked. But that--no doubt due to our nation's queer puritanical hang-ups--doesn't seem to matter much to anti-pot activists. To them, the thought of doling out weed in any form just ain't gonna cut it. This, in a society where, like, half the population's on prescribed mood lifters. The mind reels. But that's not to say cannabis-based drugs--chock full of friendly substances derived from the marijuana plant--don't have a bright future in medicine. In fact, quite the opposite is true. And right here in the good old regressive U.S. Aside from those who tap the government's stash--300 joints a month, professionally rolled in North Carolina's Research Triangle Park, says Paul Armentano, director of research for the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws, or NORML, a Washington-based pot lobby (don't be jealous, he adds; the stuff's not quality)--a great number of people suffering from the nausea brought on by chemotherapy treatment for cancer or the debilitating effects of AIDS take Marinol, which was brought to market in 1985 and today remains the only cannabis-based drug approved by the Food and Drug Administration. A synthetic version of THC (Tetrahydrocannabinol), pot's most famous ingredient, Marinol was recently reclassified from a Schedule II drug (the second-most controlled category) to a less intimidating Schedule III. It's exceedingly rare, says a spokeswoman for Unimed, the Illinois company that manufactures Marinol, for a drug to be reclassified downward in this fashion. And it bodes well for the future acceptance of cannabis-based pharmaceuticals. Marinol is so safe and established, in fact, that whatever controversy still surrounds it remains pretty limited to the problem of delivery. Since it comes in pill form, Marinol might not take effect for two to four hours. That's a long time to wait if you're trying not to vomit. And when it hits the liver, the drug is converted into a stronger compound than what you'd get from bogarting a fatty. So users, says NORML's Armentano, get more messed up than casual tokers. (A tragedy, that.) For this reason, Unimed plans to team up with another company to make an inhaler that would introduce the drug in a fashion much closer to smoking it. Attempting to improve upon Marinol, New York City-based Atlantic Technology Ventures is in the early testing phase of CT-3, a synthetic THC derivative whose technical specs are quick to assure a drug-fearing society that it prevents inflammation and eases pain to sufferers of neurological diseases, cancer, glaucoma gastrointestinal and other disorders without that annoying high. (Told you medicinal marijuana isn't as fun as it seems.) The cannabis-based dexanabinol is another promising drug engineered specifically for traumatic brain injury. Gale Smith, a spokeswoman for the New Jersey-based Pharmos, describes her company's product as a synthetic cannabanoid that's the exact mirror image of THC. (Twisting cannabis in yet another new direction, the French company Sanofi-Synthelabo is now working to reverse one of the substance's most well-known side effects--the munchies--for the treatment of obesity.) Smith says fiddling with the compound's structure robs the drug of its psychotropic effects, giving users "all the medicinal effects without the high." "People ask us why we've taken that out," she laughs, "because we could've made a lot more money otherwise." (Don't expect to see that on Pharmos' application to the FDA.) Dexanabinol is designed to prevent brain damage and inflammation after trauma. To explain the drug's effect, Smith describes a car accident in which the driver suffers a head injury. Though rescue workers find him lucid at the scene, the driver slips into a coma before reaching the hospital. This is because the neurons that died from the initial impact send biochemical signals that kill off previously unaffected brain cells. The hope is that a dexanabinol injection at the accident scene can prevent the added damage that occurs after what Smith describes as "this cascade of toxic compounds" invade the brain. The drug's anti-inflammatory properties should also prevent the brain from swelling dangerously after injury. Dexanabinol, which had its origins at Hebrew University in Israel, is in the final phase of its clinical trials, which could have its application for approval before the FDA by year's end. Down the line, Smith says Pharma hopes to win approval in treating the side effects of stroke, multiple sclerosis, diabetes, cancer and "anything in the central or peripheral nervous system," as well as cardiovascular problems. The drug's one major downside, she adds, is that "the administration could get tricky," as it's now available only for injection. But the company's investigating an oral alternative. Taking medicinal marijuana to a whole new breadth is the British GW Pharmaceuticals' "portfolio" of cannabis-based drugs used to treat sufferers of everything from AIDS to spinal cord injury, phantom limb pain and arthritis, to brain diseases such as depression, schizophrenia and even Tourette's Syndrome. These drugs, like most of the medicinal marijuana alternatives to come about since Marinol was approved almost two decades ago, utilize more than just THC. They remain in the testing phase, each drug being put through its paces separately for use in treating each symptom or disease. GW's drugs offer varied ratios of THC and another pot-derived compound, Cannabidiol (CBD), to treat common symptoms of neurological diseases. The portfolio boasts pain relief, anti-convulsant, anti-psychotic, anti-inflammatory, appetite-stimulant and similar properties. Derived from actual pot plants (guess you can do that sort of "research" in England) and administered as an under-the-tongue spray, GW's products, say its spec sheets, draw from "hundreds of years of cannabis use" that offer "compelling evidence of safety." The specs go on to explain that the ratio between a normal and a lethal dose of cannabis is 40,000 to 1--which is especially impressive considering morphine's ratio is 50 to 1, and aspirin's a shocking 23 to 1. And like most companies that manufacture cannabis-based drugs, GW wants you to know that you can reap the drugs' medical benefits without actually getting high. So much for baking on your sick bed. __________________________________________________________________________ Distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. - --- MAP posted-by: Ariel ** web: http://www.crrh.org/ ------------------------------ End of Restore-Digest V2002 #115 ******************************** Today's Restore Hemp News Visit our sister site crrh.org
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