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Fairuza Balk to host MPP's party at the Playboy Mansion
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Marijuana Policy Project Alert | April 16, 2009 | ||||||
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Dear Friends: I'm excited to announce that actress Fairuza Balk is slated to host MPP's fourth annual party at the Playboy Mansion in Los Angeles on June 4.
Fairuza is the star of the new movie âHumboldt Countyâ and has also starred in numerous other hit films, including âThe Craft,â âAmerican History X,â and âThe Waterboy.â Please visit www.mpp.org/pb2009 to purchase your tickets today, since the price will soon increase. (The ticket price is $800 now but will jump to $900 after the next 100 tickets are sold.) Here's a video of last year's party to get you in the mood: I hope you'll join me, Fairuza, and other celebrities and supporters of marijuana policy reform at our party at the Playboy Mansion: Buy your tickets today. I look forward to seeing you at the Mansion on June 4! Sincerely, Rob Kampia P.S. MPP would like to thank the party's gold sponsor, Oaksterdam University, and our silver sponsors: GreenLife Medical Systems LLC, Local Harvest Organics; Bruce Margolin, attorney at law; Spectrum Labs; and Vapor Brothers. If you or your company is interested in a sponsorship package, please reply to this e-mail.
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We are required by federal law to tell you that any donations you make to MPP may be used for political purposes, such as supporting or opposing candidates for federal office. | |||||||
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Obama Creates New "Border Czar" Position, Cartel Leaders Laugh in Unison
EL PASO, Texas (AP) â A former Justice Department official who led a 1990s crackdown on illegal border crossings was named to the new U.S. post of "border czar" Wednesday to oversee efforts to end drug-cartel violence along the U.S.-Mexico border and to slow the tide of illegal immigration.
â¦
The Obama administration has promised to target border violence and work with Mexican authorities to curb drug and arms trafficking. Hundreds of federal agents, along with high-tech surveillance gear and drug-sniffing dogs, are being deployed to the Southwest.
Sounds like fun. And when it fails spectacularly, what then? Perhaps we'll appoint a Czar Czar to coordinate the efforts of our various Czars and make sure their collaborations are fruitful. I guarantee you there are a disturbingly high number of people working in our government who would not think that is stupid.
Would you watch a reality show where the Czars all live in a house together and perform feats of prowess in exchange for prizes while Joe Rogan makes fun of them? What would that show be called?
We'll Pay You $14 billion to Legalize Marijuana
Earlier this morning, the organization presented a mock check to the U.S Treasury Department in the sum of $14 billion dollars. The check total represents the combined savings and tax revenues that would be generated by regulating the sale and production of cannabis like alcohol.
"We represent the millions of otherwise law-abiding cannabis consumers who are ready, willing, vocal and able to contribute needed tax revenue to Americaâs struggling economy," NORML Executive Director Allen St. Pierre said at a press conference at the steps of the general post office in New York City. "All we ask in exchange for our $14 billion is that our government respects our decision to use marijuana privately and responsibly." [The Hill]
Is anyone still confused about why marijuana reform is an economics issue? Mr. President?
Anyway, assuming the desperate folks at the treasury didn't attempt to cash it, let me be the first to offer a home for that large novelty check which would surely just take up space around the NORML office. It will make a sweet conversation piece. Give me that giant check, you hippies.

Allen St. Pierre, photo from The Hill Blog
American Violet
Spring 2009 Issue of NewsNotes
Errata: 4/3/09 Danger of Drug Enforcement Story
Penas: Poblaciones carcelaria y penitenciaria de EE.UU. alcanzan otro máximo histórico, mucho más de medio millón de infractores de legislación antidroga entre rejas
Legalización de la marihuana: Por primera vez, encuesta descubre apoyo mayoritario en California
A Time For Real Change!
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A TIME FOR REAL CHANGE! Sometimes change comes quickly: a warm day announces the end of winter and the start of spring . the World economy washes out years of illusionary profit and prosperity within a few short months . climate change moves from science fiction to scientific certainty. Sometimes change, however well-intended, occurs slowly. On March 18th, Attorney General Eric Holder Jr. announced that the Obama administration would end federal government support of raids on medical cannabis dispensaries in states that have legalized compassionate distribution, http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v09/n318/a07.html. And yet, on March 26th, federal agents raided a Bay area dispensary called Emmalyn's licensed by the City of San Francisco, seizing cannabis, cash, and property, but making no arrests, http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v09/n409/a10.html. Real change can't come too soon for America's critically and chronically ill, and by DONATING to DrugSense, you can help us end this unnecessary and harmful abuse of power and waste of federal police resources. DrugSense currently hosts a number of sites that support the legalization of medical cannabis, including: | |||||||||||
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| We empower medical cannabis patients, advocates, and activists through FREE services like the Media Awareness Project ( http://www.mapinc.org ), the world's largest drug policy news service and archive. We offer Media Contacts on Demand ( http://www.mapinc.org/mcod/ ), a database of over 31,000 fully searchable media contacts to which you can e-mail or fax your message. We help organize activist networks through dozens of drug-policy forums and mailing lists ( http://www.drugpolicycentral.com/hosting/clients.htm#hostedlists ). And, if you're looking for a rapid response to a local or national drug policy development, sign-up to receive our Focus Alerts ( http://mapinc.org/focus/ ). These are just some of the DrugSense tools and strategies which will help ensure that changes in U.S drug policy are more than just words from Washington spoken only for the eager press and that the personal rights and freedoms, enshrined in our Constitution, are finally reflected in American drug policy. DrugSense needs your support to end the prosecution of medical cannabis patients and promote real drug policy reform. Here's how you can help right now: | ||||||||||
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| Help stop this war on our personal rights and freedoms. Get involved. Write. Join. Donate.
Don't forget! You can spread your donation over the course of a year by automatically repeating it every month, quarter, or half year. Please visit our donation page to find out how. Checks can also be made payable to DrugSense and mailed to: DrugSense Or you can donate toll free by calling 1-800-266-5759. | ||||||||||
Again, donating is quick, easy, and secure online at http://www.drugsense.org/donate/. DrugSense is a 501(c)(3) educational non-profit organization. Your donations are tax deductible to the extent provided by law. | |||||||||||
Video: Revolutionizing Global Drug Policy
Press Release -- Obama in Mexico: Marijuana on the Agenda?

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASEÂ Â Â
APRIL 15, 2009
Obama in Mexico: Marijuana on the Agenda?
In Possible Rebuke to Obama, Mexico's Ambassador Said an End to Marijuana Prohibition "Needs to Be Taken Seriously"
CONTACT: Bruce Mirken, MPP director of communications ............... 415-585-6404 or 202-215-4205
WASHINGTON, D.C. -- With President Obama leaving for talks with Mexican President Felipe Calderon on Thursday, marijuana policy reformers are wondering if the role of U.S. marijuana laws in subsidizing vicious Mexican drug gangs will get the serious attention that Mexico's ambassador to the U.S. recently said it deserves. Obama's visit comes immediately after Mexico's Congress held a historic debate on ending marijuana prohibition.
    "In his only public statement on the issue since taking office, President Obama treated the question of ending marijuana prohibition as a joke, but the families of the 7,000 murdered by Mexican drug gangs know it's not funny," said Marijuana Policy Project executive director Rob Kampia. "By refusing to bring the massive marijuana industry out of the shadows and regulate it as we do beer, wine and liquor, we've handed a massive subsidy to some of the most brutal thugs on the planet."
    In an April 12 discussion of Mexico's brutal drug cartels on CBS's "Face the Nation," Ambassador Arturo Sarukhan was asked by host Bob Schieffer, "What if marijuana were legalized? Would that change this situation?"
    Rather than dismissing the idea as President Obama did in his recent online town hall meeting, Sarukhan said, "This is a debate that needs to be taken seriously, that we have to engage in on both sides of the border."
    "Ambassador Sarukhan got it exactly right," said MPP director of government relations Aaron Houston. "The public in both countries is ready for a serious discussion about the marijuana laws that are directly aiding the murderous gangs that are killing people daily and now operate in 230 U.S. cities. It's time for Presidents Obama and Calderon to show the sort of decisive leadership that's needed to get both of our countries out of this mess."
    With more than 27,000 members and 100,000 e-mail subscribers nationwide, the Marijuana Policy Project is the largest marijuana policy reform organization in the United States. MPP believes that the best way to minimize the harm associated with marijuana is to regulate marijuana in a manner similar to alcohol. For more information, please visit http://MarijuanaPolicy.org.
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