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Harvard Scientists Build Very Cool Bong

At last, a solution to the problem of not being able to get high during a brain scan:
Smoking during a brain scan is not easy. Why would you want to? Because functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) allows researchers to observe activity in the brain, and doing so while smoking tobacco or pot could enhance our understanding of addiction and how to treat it.
…

Displaying skills that would put MacGyver to shame, Frederick constructed a makeshift water pipe inside of a picnic cooler, then ran 2.4 meters of tubing to a plastic facemask that rests inside of the scanner. Since the mask is made from materials that are not magnetic, it will not interfere with the imaging. [Wired]
In college, my friend Derek conducted some remarkably similar research. Lacking an MRI scanner, he simply conducted informal interviews to see how the device affected participants.
To be sure that the contraption can get people high, Lindsey and her associates asked nine volunteers to inhale smoke from a marijuana cigarette with exactly 3.51 percent THC, then checked to see how much of the drug made it into their blood. Using the mask, the subjects got almost as high as if they had puffed on a joint directly. The researchers suggested using stronger weed to achieve more realistic effects.
These people are geniuses. Next they need to build a device to administer nachos during a brain scan. Hypothesis: Scott Morgan will experience feelings of contentment.
In The Trenches

Michigan medical marijuana campaign needs your urgent help

MPP’s campaign to pass a medical marijuana initiative in Michigan urgently needs your help.

In May, the Michigan Coalition for Compassionate Care (MCCC) began gathering signatures to place a statewide medical marijuana initiative on the November 2008 ballot.

If you live in Michigan, MCCC needs you to collect signatures or to make a sizable donation to ensure the initiative gets on the ballot. If you don’t live in Michigan, MCCC needs you to donate money to support the signature-gathering effort.?

Four months into the signature drive, MCCC has collected half the signatures that are needed. And since the signature drive must be completed by mid-November — which is just two months away — your help is needed now.

Michigan law requires MCCC to collect 304,101 valid signatures in order to place the medical marijuana initiative on the November 2008 ballot. Because the validity rate for the signatures that are being collected is hovering around 60%, this means we actually need to collect about 500,000 raw signatures to qualify the initiative for the ballot. So far, we have about 250,000 raw signatures in-hand, so we’re halfway there.

It’s going to cost about $500,000 to obtain the remaining 250,000 raw signatures that are needed — or about $2 apiece. This means we need to spend more than $8,000 per day — every day, including Saturdays and Sundays — between now and the middle of November to qualify the initiative for the statewide ballot.

Would you please visit www.StopArrestingPatients.org to donate $10 or more today?  If everyone on this e-mail list were to donate just $10, we’d have literally twice as much money ($1,000,000) as will be needed to complete the signature drive.

Making Michigan the 13th state to protect medical marijuana patients from arrest is crucial to our national strategy: Michigan is the country's eighth largest state and would be the first medical marijuana state in the Midwest.

Would you please lend your support today?

I’ll be grateful for anything you can do to help.

Sincerely,

Rob Kampia
Executive Director
Marijuana Policy Project
Washington, D.C.

P.S. As I've mentioned in previous alerts, a major philanthropist has committed to match the first $3.0 million that MPP can raise from the rest of the planet in 2007. This means that your donation today will be doubled.

In The Trenches

Free viewing/download of the October edition of Art for Justice online (or buy it on Monday)

We are pleased to announce that the October edition of the Prison Art Gallery art catalog, Art for Justice, is now online at http://prisonsfoundation.org/octafj.pdf You can also purchase a hard copy of it on Monday, October 1, when it is published (as usual) as a full-color special section of Street Sense, the nationally recognized progressive periodical published in Washington, DC for socially conscious people. Get your copy of Street Sense from the more than 50 Street Sense vendors in Washington wearing the bright-colored Street Sense vests. To view/download the October edition of Art for Justice online, please visit http://prisonsfoundation.org/octafj.pdf. All of the art featured in Art for Justice can be purchased at the Prison Art Gallery, 1600 K Street NW in downtown Washington, DC (open every day until 5:30pm) or by email at [email protected] or phone at 202-393-1511. Thank you for your interest in these superb, reasonably-priced works produced by imprisoned artists from across America. For more information, please call 202-393-1511.
In The Trenches

Trinity County CA Increases MMJ Patient Guideline to 3 Pounds

Safe Access Now is pleased that Trinity County Supervisors have adopted new medical marijuana guidelines consistent with the SAN recommendation of 3 pounds per patient. The county at the same time increased its garden plant count allowing up to 36 plants per patient, 12 mature and/or 24 immature. Trinity County joins Sonoma, Humboldt, and Santa Cruz counties in using the three pound per patient supply standard. SAN recommends allowing any number of plants so long as the garden canopy does not exceed 100 square feet. Del Norte, Sonoma, Humboldt, Mendocino and Santa Cruz utilize the 100 square foot garden standard. Congratulations to the patients and County Supervisors in Trinity County.
In The Trenches

The Sentencing Project: Disenfranchisement News & Updates - 9/27/07

Florida: Despite Landmark Move, Coalition Challenges Limitations of Re-enfranchisement Policy The Florida Rights Restoration Coalition (FRRC), a coalition of over 40 local, state and national organizations dedicated to eradicating Florida's antiquated and discriminatory voting rights ban, has submitted a memo to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights to propose changes to the state's disenfranchisement policy enacted in April by the Clemency Board. The coalition proposes that the state adopt a "truly automatic, paperwork-free, rights restoration process for all Floridians who have completed their sentences, with any restitution owed to be paid, but not as a precondition to rights restoration." The current policy lifts the voting ban for non-violent offenders who have completed parole and probation and have paid restitution, but individuals must wait for the Clemency Board to restore their rights - a major obstacle according to the coalition. It also stated that the new rules pose several re-entry problems, including: -Burden on individuals who have been released and completed supervision -Needlessly complex and unclear restoration rules which lead to the poor administration of voting rolls -Bureaucratic delays in processing cases National: Jena Six Case, Disenfranchisement, Examples of Nation's Racial Disparity "The state laws are so varied that from jurisdiction to jurisdiction there is no consistency on what convictions will trigger a loss of voting rights," writes Dr. Henrie M. Treadwell, director of Community Voices in a column featured on BlackNews.com. Dr. Treadwell writes of the discrepancy and racial impacts of disenfranchisement and calls for action on the part of individuals nationally. "The burden falls upon communities to push their local legislators to advocate for reinstating voting rights to prisoners and those formerly incarcerated, especially the non-violent offenders." Theodore Shaw, Director-Counsel and President of the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, links racial disparities within the criminal justice system to the disenfranchisement of formerly incarcerated individuals and the Jena, LA., case in an interview published in the Oberlin Review. "[The Jena Six] is an example of the fact that racial disparities and discrimination are alive and well. While [it] is an important case, it is emblematic of a larger pattern of treatment of disparate ways of black and brown people that exist around this country ... Issues like felon disenfranchisement continue to bedevil us and will continue to bedevil us," he stated. International: High Court's Reasons Reveal 'Inconsistencies' in Constitution In August, the Australian High Court struck down a blanket ban denying all incarcerated individuals the right to vote, finding that the legislation was unlawful and unconstitutional. The Court's reasons in Roach vs. Electoral Commission and Commonwealth of Australia held that the 2006 amendments to the law were inconsistent with the system of representative democracy established by the Constitution. From 1902 to 1983, legislation banned certain prisoners from voting. Afterward, individuals sentenced for an offence punishable by imprisonment for one year were banned. Further changes to the legislation were enacted and in 2006 the Commonwealth Electoral Act was adopted disqualifying individuals serving any prison sentence from voting in federal elections. - - - - - - Help The Sentencing Project continue to bring you news and updates on disenfranchisement! Make a contribution today. Contact Information: email: [email protected], web: http://www.sentencingproject.org
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