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Police Dept. Blocks Officer From Speaking About Legalization

From our friends at LEAP:

Active duty police officer and LEAP speaker/blogger David Bratzer was planning to accept an invitation to speak about drug policy and harm reduction at an official city government-sponsored event this week...until his police department's leadership stepped in and ordered him not to show up.

More details here.
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Thanks to the Drug War, Innocent People Fear Police

When a mysterious package of marijuana arrived at the home of Berwyn Heights Mayor Cheye Calvo, police arrived moments later and murdered his dogs in a horrible botched drug raid. He was completely innocent, and now other innocent people who receive suspicious packages have to worry about being victimized by law-enforcement:

Sloan and Anderson have a German shepherd named Cheyenne. Sloan said the Berwyn Heights fiasco sprang to her mind the instant her husband told her about the coffee grounds.

"Before he even looked in to see what kind of drugs they were, I called 911," she said. "I told them exactly what was going on. I'm like, I don't want them coming through my door with guns drawn, because I love my dog." [Washington Post]

It's just so tragic that anyone would even have to worry about such a thing. Every single element of this problem is a symptom of prohibition, from the smuggling technique of intercepting packages at random addresses all the way up to the violent raids and dog killings that occur when police crash into private homes with big guns and no proof of guilt. It's a dreadful situation and no one is safe from it.

For more on the horrors of paramilitary policing, here's an interesting piece from Radley Balko and some disturbing news from Pete Guither.
In The Trenches

Regulation, Not Prohibition is Key to Reducing Teen Marijuana Use

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE                                                                                                     

March 2, 2010

Regulation, Not Prohibition is Key to Reducing Teen Marijuana Use

Unlike drug dealers, licensed merchants in a regulated market would be prohibited from selling to underage customers, be required to check IDs

CONTACT: Kurt A. Gardinier, MPP director of communications …… 202-905-0738 or [email protected]

WASHINGTON, DC — An annual survey released today by the Partnership for a Drug-Free America shows that the number of American teenagers who use marijuana has increased for the first time in 10 years, with 25 percent of teens in grades 9 through 12 saying they’ve used marijuana in the past month, up from 19 percent the previous year.

         “These latest numbers show that our current marijuana policies—which keep marijuana unregulated and in the hands of drug dealers—are clearly not working to help reduce teen use,” said Kurt A. Gardinier, director of communications for the Marijuana Policy Project. “But if marijuana were taxed and regulated, and sold only by licensed merchants who would be required to check IDs, we could much better control marijuana and help to keep it out of the hands of teenagers. That’s why cigarette smoking among teens has continued to drop since the early ‘90’s, while teen marijuana use has not. Drug dealers do not check IDs.”  

         In the Netherlands, for example, marijuana is sold in regulated establishments to adults who must show proof of age. As a result, according to a 2008 World Health Organization survey, the overall rate of marijuana use in the Netherlands is less than half what it is in the United States. Additionally, only 7% of Dutch teens have tried marijuana by age 15. In the U.S., as many as 20.2% of teens have tried marijuana by age 15, according to government estimates.

         With more than 124,000 members and supporters 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.mpp.org.

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In The Trenches

What is Keeping Maryland from Passing a Medical Marijuana Law?

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE                                                                                                                                 

MARCH 2, 2010

What is Keeping Maryland from Passing a Medical Marijuana Law?

Despite overwhelming public support and virtually no opposition, key officials are still silent about their stance on the issue

CONTACT: Mike Meno, MPP assistant director of communications …………… 202-905-2030

ANNAPOLIS, MARYLAND — Last Friday, Feb. 26, the Maryland House Judiciary and Health and Government Committees held a public hearing on a bill that would allow chronically ill patients to have safe access to medical marijuana with their doctor’s recommendation—an idea supported by 81% of Americans nationwide, according to a recent ABC News/Washington Post poll. Dozens of witnesses—including physicians, patients, and former law enforcement officials—testified in favor of the bill, and no one testified in opposition. Fourteen other states have already passed medical marijuana laws. So why hasn’t Maryland?

         Previous efforts to pass medical marijuana legislation in Maryland all failed to make it out of the House Judiciary Committee, chaired by Del. Joseph F. Vallario , Jr., (D-Dist. 27A, Calvert and Prince George’s Counties). In the past, Del. Vallario has expressed concern over legislation that might clash with federal law. But medical marijuana should no longer trigger such concerns following the October release of an Obama administration memo instructing federal prosecutors not to target medical marijuana patients or caregivers who obey state law.

         Just last week, a poll conducted by Conquest Communications in Del. Vallario’s House District showed support for passing this year’s medical marijuana bill outnumbered opposition nearly 3-1.  

         “Sometimes in an election year you’ll see politicians shy away from controversial issues, but these polls show there’s nothing controversial anymore about medical marijuana – except maybe opposing it,” said Dan Riffle, a legislative analyst with the Marijuana Policy Project. “Now that the federal government has given the green light to states to enact medical marijuana laws, there should be nothing stopping Chariman Vallario and others here in Maryland from listening to the will of their constituents.”

         With more than 124,000 members and supporters nationwide, the Marijuana Policy Project is the largest marijuana policy reform organization in the United States. For more information, please visit http://MarijuanaPolicy.org.

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In The Trenches

Drug Truth 03/01/10

Cultural Baggage * Century of Lies * 4:20 Drug War NEWS Cultural Baggage for 02/28/10 29:00 Richard Lee, founder Oaksterdam Univ, marijuana "death" in Ohio, Dr. Robert Melameade, Bill Piper of DPA, Tim Mehan on Canada's "progress" & DTN tries K2 LINK: http://www.drugtruth.net/cms/node/2796 TRANSCRIPT: ASAP Century of Lies for 02/28/10 29:00 Dane Schiller, reporter w/Hou Chronicle covers Mexican war + Aaron Houston, Dir of Govt Relations for Marijuana Policy Project LINK: http://www.drugtruth.net/cms/node/2798 TRANSCRIPT: ASAP 4:20 Drug War NEWS, 03/01 to 03/07/10 Link at www.drugtruth.net on the right margin - Sun - Dr. Robert Melameade, Pres. of Cannabis Science Inc. a new company on NASDAQ, stock CBIS Sat - Aaron Houston of Marijuana Policy Project re Mexican war Fri - Dane Schiller reports on Mexico for the Houston Chronicle Thu - "Life, Liberty & Happiness" #1, with Richard Lee, founder Oaksterdam University Wed - Bill Piper of the Drug Policy Alliance on Obama's drug war Tue - 1 Dead in Ohio + Puritan's Pride Mon - Report on K2 synth weed from WCBD + DTN tests K2 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?": Cult Bag = Nurse Mary Lynn Mathre & Al Byrne of Patients out of Time COL = Vanda Felbab-Brown of the Brookings Institue, author "Shooting Up, Counterinsurgency and the War on Drugs" 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 72 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
Blog

Oliver North Says Dumb Things About the Drug War

You've just gotta read this editorial from Oliver North, in which he claims, among other things, that the media never reports on the Mexican drug war (they do so constantly) and that the Obama administration is trying to legalize drugs ("legalization" isn't even in their vocabulary, remember?).

The whole thing is just an impressively confused argument from a man whose extraordinary crimes against our nation will never be forgotten. The fact that this particular guy wants to see more aggressive tactics in the war on drugs is the best evidence that we need the opposite.

For more on what a hypocrite scumbag Oliver North is, see this post from Pete Guither.
Blog

Which is More Dangerous: Marijuana or Machine Guns?

Via The Agitator, here's another vexing example of the inherent hypocrisy of performing heavily armed SWAT raids in the name of protecting the public:

Police arrested Jonathan E. Whitworth, 25, of 1501 Kinloch Court on Feb. 11 on suspicion of possession of drug paraphernalia, possession of marijuana and second-degree child endangerment.
…
SWAT members encountered a pit bull upon entry, held back and then fatally shot the dog, which officers said was acting in an uncontrollably aggressive manner.

Whitworth was arrested, and his wife and 7-year-old son were present during the SWAT raid, Haden said. A second dog, which Whitworth’s attorney Jeff Hilbrenner described as a corgi, also was shot but was not killed. [Columbia Tribune]

So this guy is charged with child endangerment for possessing a misdemeanor amount of marijuana, yet police are free to enter private homes and shoot the family pets right in front of innocent children. It seems the only thing dangerous about a small bag of weed is that police might get the mistaken idea that you're a major supplier and raid your home with guns blazing.

As safe as marijuana is, it would be a hell of a lot safer if the cops didn't do these kinds of things.
In The Trenches

Safe Streets Arts Foundation: Our Director to perform at ACLU awards dinner

Can't wait for our director Dennis Sobin to perform his classical-jazz guitar music again at the Kennedy Center? Got $150 to spend on a very worthwhile cause (ACLU awards dinner) at Washington's prestigious Omni Shoreham Hotel on March 18?

 

As many fans of our director's classical and jazz guitar playing know, when he is not engaged in his regular performances at the Kennedy Center, he appears at colleges, festivals and (his favorite) nonprofit fundraisers. Coming up on his busy early spring performance schedule is the annual Nation's Capital ACLU Bill of Rights Awards Dinner on March 18, 2010, 6:30 pm at the Omni Shoreham in Washington, DC. Presenting the awards this year is Gregory B. Craig, President Obama's first White Counsel Counsel. Mr. Craig led the Administration's effort to close the Guantanamo Bay Detention Camp and fought for President Obama's "civil liberties campaign" to correct many of President Bush's harsh policies.

For more information about the ACLU awards dinner, please click here. For free listening/downloads of Dennis Sobin's ten guitar music CDs, please click here. Thank you.

 


 
All art on this page created by imprisoned artists and available at our Prison Art Gallery or online at
http://prisonsfoundation.org/art.htmt

 

"The Safe Streets Arts Foundation, incorporating both the Prisons Foundation and the Victims Foundation, is proud to sponsor the annual From-Prison-to-The-Stage Show at the Kennedy Center and the Prison Art Gallery at 1600 K Street. NW, Suite 501, Washington, DC, three blocks from the White House."

Gallery logo 

In The Trenches

European Coalition for Just and Effective Drug Policies -- March 2010 Bulletin

ENCOD BULLETIN ON DRUG POLICIES IN EUROPE MARCH 2010 "CLOSER TO THE TRUTH" From March 8th to 12th, 2010, the UN Commission on Narcotic Drugs will hold its annual meeting in Vienna, to evaluate the results of the current drug control strategy. The stated goal of this strategy is to reduce the production, trade and demand for illegal drugs. The truth is, that there are no positive results of this strategy at all. On February 23, 2010, during the Public Hearing on EU Drug Policies that Encod co-organised in the European Parliament, Carel Edwards, the Head of the Drugs Coordination Unit of the European Commission stated that: "Repression does not work. We know enough now to draw this conclusion." Since March 2009, the European Commission has had in its possession a report on the impact of drug policies on the Global Market of Illicit Drugs from 1998 to 2007. This report draws the following conclusion: current drug policies, based on prohibition, fail to diminish drug supply and demand and are causing harm to individuals and society at large. An ENCOD delegation will also be present at the coming meeting in Vienna, to remind government delegates that they are there to protect their people against dangers, not to expose them to these dangers. On March 4, Encod members will organise a protest at the Embassy of Malaysia both in Paris and London. The same day a public letter to the Malaysian government will be published in the Malaysian press in order to ask for an immediate end to the death penalty for drug offenders. The truth of the statement we have made for many years, that prohibition is the real menace for society, is becoming as evident as the fact that the sun rises every day. Drug prohibition results in immense illegal profits, perturbing the economy, corrupting authorities and fueling armed groups. It causes and increases social exclusion and individual stress. The total public expenditure needed to maintain drug prohibition just in the EU is estimated (conservatively) at 40 billion Euros, or 80 Euros per citizen per year. In times of economic crisis we can no longer allow such an amount to be wasted on a policy that clearly has no benefit whatsoever, and at the same time generates problems and harm for millions of individuals. The Reuter Trautmann report also exposes these truths. Those who accept scientific evidence can no longer deny that drug prohibition has been proved a false theory. A framework for the legal production and distribution of drugs is the only reasonable and effective way to reduce drug related problems, reduce organised crime and raise tax revenues to invest in health, education and social programmes. The question is not if, but when. To accelerate the end of prohibition, we must continue with determination to fulfill two objectives: discredit the prohibitionist regime, ensuring it has no way to rejuvenate itself, and encourage people who want another policy to speak up and demand change. When will common sense start to rule the world of drug policy, and the world in general? Read all about it in the next Encod bulletin. By Joep Oomen, with the help of Peter Webster
In The Trenches

Take A Moment To Support Compassion And Common Sense

Take A Moment To Support Compassion And Common Sense

Please take a moment to support compassion and common sense by making a donation to DrugSense. Whether we realize it or not, public policies affect our everyday lives. When policies fail us, we often take notice only after its too late. Compassion and common sense may be the first casualties.

Public policies toward legal and illegal substances have far reaching consequences. They are costly, they are nonsensical, and they are often cruel. Organizations like DrugSense that bring these injustices to the fore deserve adequate funding. A donation to DrugSense is a "vote" for compassion and common sense.

Donating is quick, easy, and secure. http://www.DrugSense.org/donate

You can also make your check or money order payable to DrugSense and mail it to:

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

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

*SPECIAL NOTE!* Due to the generosity of a long time DrugSense funder, we have secured a large matching funds grant! This means that anything you contribute right NOW to DrugSense will be matched 100%, thus doubling the effective amount of your contribution.

Also, you can easily repeat your donation every month, quarter, or half year to provide DrugSense with automatic, recurring support. (www.drugsense.org/donate/) Please sign up for whatever you can afford. Recurring donations count against the matching funds grant.

STILL NOT CONVINCED? Here are a few good reasons to donate to DrugSense:

  • DrugSense is popular. Our collection of websites rank among the most popular drug policy-focused sites in the world as judged by independent web monitoring services. They consistently trump websites for which the government has spent billions.
  • DrugSense is comprehensive. Our news bot, http://www.drugnewsbot.org processes more than 1,000 drug policy-focused articles 24/7, while our 210,000+ DrugNews Archive http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/ holds the most important clippings, correctly attributed and regardless of spin.
  • DrugSense is worldwide. We maintain parallel efforts in the Canada, the Netherlands, Germany, and France, while our archive contains clippings from Afghanistan to Zimbabwe.
  • DrugSense is technical. We provide first rate Internet services to well more than 130 drug policy organizations. This includes Web hosting, e-mail lists, forums, blogs, and newsfeeds. http://www.drugpolicycentral.com.

This is only a partial list of the services we provide to promote compassionate, common sense, and cost effective drug policies and to stop this war on our rights and freedoms. Please donate what you can. Make a difference RIGHT NOW! http://www.drugsense.org/donate.

Thank you!

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Afghanistan The real Deal

All over America, every time you pull up at a Stop and Go for a pit stop, depending on the neighborhood, outside a few feet away from the door someone is hanging out. That person is dealing crack from Columbia, or heroin, from opium poppy grown in Afghanistan. Control of that opium poppy inspires and funds the Taliban. The opium / heroin sold in America, one million $2 bags a day, funds the Taliban. They pay their troops $250 - $300 per month. Jihad has little to do with the fighting - opium and heroin smuggling is what the war is about!