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Semanal: Blogueando en el Bar Clandestino

“¿Será que John McCain va a evitar hacer una campaña de mano dura con la criminalidad?”, “Reactores de combate hacen volar cultivo plusmarquista de marihuana”, “Otros dos horribles desastres en redadas antidrogas”, “Oposición recién descubierta de Bob Barr a la lucha contra la droga muestra que todo es posible”, “Vietnam manda que la policía venza la lucha contra la droga hasta agosto”, “Basta de pretextos y váyanse a ver ‘Bajo escucha’”, “La gente va presa voluntariamente apenas para poder vender drogas en la cárcel”, “La guerra a la droga es una guerra contra las comunidades de color”, “George Bush y la cocaína: Cómo el presidente podría salvar su índice de aprobación”.
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Preso: Apresan al activista yippie veterano Dana Beal en Illinois

El activista veterano Dana Beal de la afamada Marcha del Millón de Porros pasó más de una semana entre rejas en Illinois, detenido por cargos de blanqueo de capitales después que la policía encontró $150,000 en efectivo. Pero salió bajo fianza el jueves después que se sobreseyó el cargo inicial, que fue reemplazado por una acusación de obstrucción a la Justicia. El efectivo todavía está bajo custodia.
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Dutch Smoking Ban Could Improve Marijuana Quality

Rumors of a smoking ban in the Netherlands have long threatened Amsterdam's popular coffeeshop scene, where customers can openly buy and smoke marijuana. In a bizarre turn, however, it looks like they've come up with an interesting compromise:

New laws similar to those which took effect in England last summer, will ban the smoking of tobacco - but not cannabis - in enclosed public places in the Netherlands from July 1.

Critics say the change will encourage users to turn to much stronger forms of the drug.

Users will still be able to light up joints filled with pure cannabis but technically banned from mixing in tobacco. [The Telegraph]

I just don't even know what to say about this. Common sense ought to dictate that businesses be allowed to choose what environment to offer their customers, but if you're gonna have a smoking ban, the marijuana exemption certainly takes the teeth out of it.

For the hardcore marijuana enthusiasts among us, a friend sends this interesting assesment of the smoking ban's potential impact on Dutch marijuana culture:

The popularity of mixing tobacco into joints is due in part to the widespread use of chemical fertilizers used when growing the commercial cannabis that is typically available in Dutch coffeeshops. "Chemmy" pot doesn't burn properly without tobacco, thus we may soon face an epidemic of joints that won’t stay lit.

Lacking the tobacco option, coffeeshop customers may soon find themselves craving properly-grown organic cannabis, currently a rare find at most Dutch coffeeshops. If, to any extent, this change in the law results in increased use of more conscientious cultivation practices, the long term impact on the quality of Dutch cannabis could be substantial.

Organic cannabis is more flavorful, softer on the lungs, and produces a more satisfying high. Moreover, proper organic methods can achieve the same yields as the destructive chemical/hydroponic technique that many growers believe is necessary to produce a sizable harvest. Experts such as Jason King have long lamented the poor quality of commercial cannabis available in Amsterdam and this new law may have the unintended effect of pushing things back in the right direction.

Really? Well that sounds logical enough to me, I guess. You won't find that kind of analysis in The Telegraph, that's for sure.
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In The Trenches

Press Release: New York Assembly Passes Medical Marijuana Bill

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
JUNE 18, 2008

New York Assembly Passes Medical Marijuana Bill
Bill Sponsor, Patients Urge Senate to Pass Bill Before June 23 Recess

CONTACT: Dan Bernath, MPP assistant director of communications, 202-462-5747 ex. 115

ALBANY, NEW YORK — The New York Assembly passed a bill today that would protect New Yorkers with life threatening or debilitating conditions from arrest for using medical marijuana when their doctors believe it would be the best treatment option, 79-48.

The bill is similar to the medical marijuana bill the Assembly passed last year. The version passed today was modified to address concerns voiced by members of the Senate, who have until June 23 to pass the bill before the legislature recesses.

"Every day that goes by without this sensible, compassionate law is a day in which our most vulnerable citizens must choose between suffering debilitating pain or risking arrest in order to find relief," said bill sponsor and Assembly Health Committee Chair Richard N. Gottfried. "These patients don't have the luxury of waiting another year for their elected representatives to act – they need the Senate to stand up for them now."

Dr. Kevin Smith, a Saugerties psychiatrist who has been recognized by the state legislature for his work with police forensics, said the bill would change the lives of people like him who have no better pain relief options.

"Unless you or a loved one has experienced it, it's difficult to understand the frustration and helplessness that comes from knowing that relief is readily available but forbidden by law," said Smith, who suffers from a painful genetic defect that causes his immune system to attack his spine and hips as though they were foreign bodies; the debilitating pain forced him to quit practicing medicine. "Medical marijuana can give me my life back, but right now I am barred by law from using it. This is crazy."

Glenn Amandola, a medically retired New York City police officer from Northport who suffers from chronic pain and a seizure disorder after being injured on the job in 1987, said it makes no sense for the law to prevent him from using medical marijuana when his doctor says it could help.

"As an officer with the New York City Police Department, I swore to uphold state law, and I'll never break that oath," he said. "The flip side to that, however, is that our lawmakers owe it to people like me who live in constant pain to make sure the law doesn't penalize us for seeking relief. I should have the right to decide for myself – with my doctor – what my best treatment options are."

With more than 23,000 members and 180,000 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 www.MarijuanaPolicy.org.

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