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In The Trenches

Remember: Your holiday wish

Dear friends:

A few weeks ago, I asked you to imagine a day when people can use marijuana without fear of arrest and prison.

A day when cancer and AIDS patients using marijuana to ease their pain aren't terrified of losing their homes if caught.

A day when marijuana is treated like alcohol and is taxed, regulated, and legal.

If you were waiting for the best possible moment to make your gift count, now is that moment. There's no doubt that 2009 has been the best year so far in the history of marijuana policy reform. But with the recent changes in marijuana laws in Washington, D.C., we can see that 2010 is going to be even bigger.

Here's how you can help make your holiday wish come true. Please select your wish from the list below, and your gift will help us to end marijuana prohibition for good. And if you give during the next nine days, a generous philanthropist will double it.

David, this is our moment. We have to be ready. Now is the time to send your most generous gift.

Sincerely,

Rob's signature

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

Come Help End the War on Drugs!

View this message on our website: www.drugsense.org/fundraisers/2009/DS21Dec09.htm


21 December 2009

Come Help End the War on Drugs!


Donate Now!

AT some point, zillions of cyber-moments ago, I stumbled upon a goldmine of information called the Media Awareness Project. I was instantly 'hooked' and have enjoyed every moment I've spent learning my way through every volunteer position. I'd like to share with you some of my experiences in hopes that you'll find something that you might like to try. I have found there is just no better feeling than getting to the end of my day with the knowledge that I've contributed to ending the atrocity we call the War on Drugs. Of course, if you don't have time to donate, we're always in need of financial support, www.drugsense.org/donate.

MAP

The first time I landed at mapinc.org I instantly agreed that writing letters to the editors of newspapers would not only help balance WOD coverage but would also let people know that they were not alone with their doubts about our failed drug policies. I followed some of the writing guidelines ( www.mapinc.org/resource/#guides ) and received ink fairly quickly. I was thrilled to see my name in print but realizing how this small effort would affect those who read it was even more rewarding.

Newshawk Now!

I hungrily started ripping through the burgeoning newspaper websites following our Newshawk guidelines, www.mapinc.org/hawk.htm. I must admit it was quite addictive as each appropriate article became my "fix" and seeing my name on the Newshawk line was the "high". These articles are posted to our fully searchable archives which supplies targets for our writers, is a fantastic research tool and ensures no one will ever be able to deny the inhumane treatment of so many people which occurs on a daily basis all across the world.

Our senior editor, Richard Lake, noticed my activity and enthusiasm and invited me to join the MAP Editor family. He patiently walked me through the article processing tasks and we have been best "buds" ever since. One of our first projects was the development of an online, self-paced tutorial to allow new MAP Editors to learn how to get an article from our Newshawks to our archives.

Not long after that I accepted the staff position of Membership Coordinator from which I am writing this message to you today. If you would like to help us contribute to changing our failed drug policies we would love to find a volunteer position to fit your schedule and talents. It doesn't matter where you are in location or skill level. Please take a moment to join our family by filling out our online volunteer form, www.mapinc.org/volunteers .


Jo-D Harrison
Membership Coordinator

P.S. If you are considering a year end donation, don't forget that reforming drug policy through DrugSense as a 501(c)(3) non-profit is tax deductible to the extent provided by law. Donating is quick and easy. Just visit www.drugsense.org/donate.

Checks can also be made payable to DrugSense and mailed to:

DrugSense
14252 Culver Dr #328
Irvine, CA 92604-0326

Or you can donate toll free by calling 1-800-266-5759.

Donations can automatically repeating it every month, quarter, or half year as noted here www.drugsense.org/donate.

Happy Holidays and Peace on Earth!


DrugSense/MAP
14252 Culver Drive #328 Irvine, CA, 92604-0326   (800) 266-5759
DrugSense is a 501(c)(3) educational non-profit. Donations are tax deductible to the extent provided by law.


For more information please visit:

In The Trenches

DTN Holiday Programs

Cultural Baggage * Century of Lies * 4:20 Drug War NEWS Cultural Baggage for 12/20/09, 29:00 Wash State Rep Roger Goodman + DTN listener Christmas wishes LINK: http://www.drugtruth.net/cms/node/2708 TRANSCRIPT: Tuesday Century of Lies for 12/20/09, 29:00 Steve DeAngelo, Dir of Harborside Health Center + DTN listener Christmas callsLINK: http://www.drugtruth.net/cms/node/2709 TRANSCRIPT: Tuesday 4:20 Drug War NEWS, 12/21 to 12/27/09 Link at www.drugtruth.net on the right margin - Sun - Steve DeAngelo, 2/2 Sat - Steve DeAngelo, Exec Dir of Harborside Health Center in Oakland 1/2 Fri - Christmas thoughts from Roman Catholic Priest Joseph Ganselle on prison overcrowding Thu - Merry Christmas from DTN & Cheech and Chong Wed - Wash State Rep Roger Goodman 2/2 Tue - Wash State Rep Roger Goodman calls for legalization of marijuana 1/2 Mon - California Assembly Member Tom Ammiano and Washington State Representative Roger Goodman discuss legalizing cannabis Programs produced at Pacifica Radio Station KPFT in Houston, 90.1 FM. You can Listen Live Online at www.kpft.org - Cultural Baggage Sun, 7:30 PM ET, 6:30 PM CT, 5:30 PM MT, 4:30 PM PT (Followed Immediately By Century of Lies) - Century of Lies, SUN, 8 PM ET, 7 PM CT, 6 PM MT & 5 PM PT Who's Next to "Face The Inquisition?": Top 10 Reasons To End Drug War Hundreds of our programs are available online at www.drugtruth.net, www.audioport.org We have potcasts, searchability, CMS, XML, sorts by guest name and by organization. We provide the "unvarnished truth about the drug war" to scores of broadcast affiliates i You can tune into both our 1/2 hour programs, live, at 6:30 central time on Pacifica's KPFT at http://www.kpft.org and call in your questions and concerns toll free at 1-877-9-420 420. The two, 29:00 shows appear along with the seven, daily, 3:00 "4:20 Drug War NEWS" reports each Monday morning at http://www.drugtruth.net . We currently have 71 affiliated, yet independent broadcast stations. With a simple email request to [email protected] , your station can join the Drug Truth Network, free of charge. Check out our latest videos via www.youtube.com/fdbecker Please become part of the solution, visit our website: www.endprohibition.org for links to the best of reform. "Prohibition is evil." - Reverend Dean Becker, DTN Producer, 713-462-7981, www.drugtruth.net
In The Trenches

Drug Policy Alliance: Your Donation Will Be Matched

 

You Can Make a Difference

Dear friends,

Give today to have your tax-deductible gift doubled by an anonymous donor. 

Donate
Donate Now

I've never had a year like this in all my years fighting to end the drug war. 

With your help, we’ve scored some major victories, but drug war proponents have been battling, too, and I can't say we're winning  - at least not yet.

Can you help us continue the fight? If you make a tax-deductible donation today your gift will be doubled by an anonymous donor who will match your gift dollar-for-dollar through the end of the year until we reach $100,000.

We've got momentum, but we're up against a prison-industrial complex of immense power.  Never before have I needed your help as much as I do now.

The drug war zealots won't give up power or money easily. To continue our successes on the local, state and federal level, we need your support.

We have the ideas.  We have the troops.  We need you to provide the fuel.  Please give today, and your tax-deductible gift will be doubled.

Sincerely,

Ethan Signature (text free)

Ethan Nadelmann
Executive Director
Drug Policy Alliance

 

Blog

A Christmas Carol

It's the week before Christmas, and all through the land People are silent; not taking a stand. I'm doing my best to find someone who cares; I don't think that anyone's listening out there.
Blog

Drug Reform Groups Win $25,000 Facebook Contest, Get Rejected by Chase Bank

When Chase Bank announced a vote-based $5 million charitable give-away on Facebook, you can imagine the excitement that erupted among cash-strapped non-profits and their supporters. The idea was to let the public vote and decide democratically what charities deserve a little extra support in a tough economy. The top 100 vote-getters in the first round were to receive $25,000 each, and as you'd expect, drug policy groups performed quite well.

Unfortunately, Chase Bank didn't approve of some of the winners, so they changed the rules:

At least three nonprofit groups — Students for Sensible Drug Policy, the Marijuana Policy Project and an anti-abortion group, Justice for All— say they believe that Chase disqualified them over concerns about associating its name with their missions.

The groups say that until Chase made changes to the contest, they appeared to be among the top 100 vote-getters.

"They never gave us any indication that there was any problem with our organization qualifying," said Micah Daigle, executive director of Students for Sensible Drug Policy. "Now they’re completely stonewalling me." [NYT]


Clearly, Chase entered into this without fully appreciating the political implications of using new media as the centerpiece of a philanthropic PR campaign. The whole episode is now reminiscent of the public votes at Obama's Change.gov website, in which legalizing marijuana repeatedly became the most popular policy idea. If you go out of your way to give the public a voice, sometimes you'll be surprised by what you hear. But isn’t that the point?

Of course, neither Chase Bank, nor the White House, bear any legal obligation to honor the political ideals they've solicited from the public. But that's not the issue here. The whole purpose of an online vote is, rather obviously, to create the appearance of genuine fairness, to let the people decide for themselves what matters most (as Chase boasted proudly in the contest's motto: “You Decide What Matters”). By arbitrarily overturning the results, Chase irrevocably tarnishes the fundamental concept behind their effort and trivializes the exact public values the program was intended to respect and uphold.

By daring to reject drug policy organizations who'd obviously won the contest, Chase Bank sends an unambiguous message of disrespect to our movement. If they think this issue is politically volatile, they're absolutely right, but they picked the wrong side. Fixing our drug laws has become one of most prominent struggles at this moment in American politics, and it's a debate you can't simply opt out of while simultaneously draping yourself in the flag of online democracy.

If we're powerful enough to win in a fair fight, that means we can also burn those who cheat us. Our friends at SSDP won't be patronizing Chase Bank anytime soon, and I hope you'll join them.
In The Trenches
In The Trenches

Sensible Colorado: Exciting Speakers Announced for Saturday!


Stellar Speakers Announced for this Saturday's Stakeholder Meeting

Sensible Colorado is happy to announce the following line-up of speakers for 12/19's Medical Marijuana Stakeholder's Meeting.  

**Please arrive early and consider carpooling, as parking will be in high demand.**

1pm:  "Patients Perspective" panel featuring Damien LaGoy (AIDS activist), Dan Pope (Sensible Colorado), Roger Ronnas (Colorado Springs), and Vicki Meadows (Longmont).

2pm:  "Policy Makers" panel featuring Sen. Pat Steadman, fmr. Senator Bob Hagedorn, Sen. Chris Romer (invited), and Steve Fox (MPP.org).

3pm:  "Safe Access: Distribution Models" featuring Wanda James (Denver), Dr. Paul Bregman, Jill LaMouriex, and Todd Young (Boulder).

Sensible Colorado would like to send a warm thank you to the nascent DU Law Norml chapter for hosting this important event.  For more on this fien group, contact [email protected].

Event Details

WHAT:     Stakeholder Meeting to discuss medical marijuana policy in 2010

WHEN:     Saturday, December 19, 2009 from 1-4pm

WHERE:   University of Denver Law School, Student Forum, 2255 East Evans Ave., Denver CO 80208.  Map HERE.

WHO:       This event is free and open to the public.  Join patients, providers, legislators, and advocates.

Finally, please consider attending Arapahoe District Court this Friday (12/18) to show support for ending the city of Centennial's ban on dispensaries.  This hearing will occur at 1:30pm in courtroom 405 at 7325 S. Potomac St., Centennial, CO.

In The Trenches

Americans for Safe Access: December Activist Newsletter

 

In This Issue:

AMA Says Marijuana is Medicine, Urges Change in Federal Position

ASA Threatens Suit if LA Bans Medical Marijuana Sales

ASA Targets Recalcitrant Law Enforcement Group

Celebrate the Year's Victories with ASA

ACTION ALERT: Urge Your Representative to cosponsor Truth in Trials!

Become an ASA Member!

Please support the work of Americans for Safe Access

On The Web:

ASA's Mission

What We Do

ASA Forums

ASA Blog

ASA YouTube

Legal Info

Take Action

Condition-Based Booklets

Join ASA Email Lists

ASA's Online Store

"Gear up" for medical cannabis activism with ASA's new T-shirts, hats, stickers, bags and more! All proceeds go to ASA advocacy

Americans for Safe Access

1322 Webster St., Ste. 402
Oakland, CA 94612
Phone: 510-251-1856
Fax: 510-251-2036

Email us!

Americans for Safe Access
Monthly Activist Newsletter

December 2009

Volume 4, Issue 12


AMA Says Marijuana is Medicine, Urges Change in Federal Position

Physicians' Group Wants Research Barriers Removed

The leading national doctors' group has now endorsed the medical use of cannabis and called for more research into the drug's potential. The move by the American Medical Association, the largest and most prestigious organization of physicians with nearly 250,000 members, officially calls on the federal government to recognize marijuana as a medicine and make it available for more clinical research.

The decision by the AMA marks a change in policy for the organization, which has historically supported the federal government's contention that there are no currently accepted medical uses for cannabis. Led by ASA Medical and Scientific Advisory Board member Dr. Sunil Aggrawal, the AMA's Medical Student Section pushed the larger organization to change its position based on the thousands of published, peer-reviewed scientific articles exploring the therapeutic applications of cannabis and cannabinoids, including 79 controlled clinical trials.

"It's been 72 years since the AMA has officially recognized that marijuana has both already-demonstrated and future-promising medical utility," said Dr. Aggarwal, who was one of the expert reviewers for the AMA. "The AMA has written an extensive, well-documented, evidence-based report."

The AMA's Council on Science and Public Health concluded that "controlled trials indicate that smoked cannabis reduces neuropathic pain, improves appetite and caloric intake especially in patients with reduced muscle mass, and may relieve spasticity and pain in patients with multiple sclerosis."

While these are conditions for which cannabis has been repeatedly shown to be effective, the AMA's formal recognition of the established science has larger policy implications. The U.S. federal government has long used the AMA's opposition to medical cannabis as justification for its own position. But that position has now been undermined by the AMA's report, which also urges the federal government to reconsider the classification of cannabis as a Schedule I drug. Reclassifying it as a medicine would, the AMA notes, help meet "the goal of facilitating clinical research and development of cannabinoid-based medicines, and alternate delivery methods."

The full report has not yet been made public, as the AMA hopes to publish it in a peer-reviewed journal "to help educate the medical community about the scientific basis of botanical cannabis-based medicines."
The report follows a resolution adopted in June by the Medical Student Section and responds to three resolutions dealing with medical marijuana that have come before the AMA in the past year. In February 2008, a position similar to the AMA's was adopted by the American College of Physicians, the country's second-largest physician group and the largest organization of doctors of internal medicine. That resolution also called on the federal government to review marijuana's status as a Schedule I controlled substance, meaning it is considered to be highly dangerous and have no medical use.

"The two largest physician groups in the U.S. have established medical marijuana as a health care issue that must be addressed," said ASA Government Affairs Director Caren Woodson. "Both organizations have underscored the need for change by placing patients above politics."

The AMA joins the American Nurses Association, the American Academy of Family Physicians, the British Medical Association, the Canadian Medical Association, and dozens of other organizations of health professionals in recognizing established therapeutic uses and calling for additional research.

See the AMA report at:
AmericansForSafeAccess.org/downloads/AMA_Report.pdf

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