Thursday, October 25, 2007

Group lights up in favor of medical marijuana-Mothers Against Misuse and Abuse tour the state to reveal the truth about legal drugs

Group lights up in favor of medical marijuana
Mothers Against Misuse and Abuse tour the state to reveal the truth
about legal drugs
By: Katie Wilson | Freelance Reporter |
Issue date: 10/15/07 Section: News

source:http://media.www.dailyemerald.com

Everyday people are destroying their bodies with perfectly legal and
easily accessible drugs, says Sandee Burbank, executive director for
Mothers Against Misuse and Abuse.

The worst part? They have no idea that they are doing this to themselves.

Burbank spoke at the downtown Eugene Public Library last Friday as
part of a state-wide MAMA tour. The organization is on a mission to
pull back the veil on what Americans are being told to put into their
bodies.

"It's amazing how uneducated we are about the drugs out there," Burbank said.

MAMA advocates the Medical Marijuana Program primarily because it has
seen people destroyed by pain when the medicine prescribed by doctors
didn't work. Often, it made things worse.

"The more (medications) they gave me, the problem got worse," said
Alice Ivany, who traveled with Burbank to share her story.

Ivany's left arm was amputated after an industrial accident in 1977.
She was on a number of pain pills which made her very ill. Nothing
worked. Life was further complicated by a surgery.

She began taking Tylenol and continued taking it for 10 years. As a
result, she developed high blood pressure and will be on medication
for that condition for the rest of her life.

Running out of options, she discussed medical marijuana, also called
cannabis, with her doctor.

"I hadn't thought of it as a medication at the time," she said. "It's
given me a quality of life I didn't have before."

After a life spent physically pushing his body, Jack Thomas finally
came crashing down when he destroyed discs in his spine.

The doctors prescribed three daily doses of 600 milligrams of ibuprofen.

"By the time I finished that, my stomach was gone," Thomas said.

Doctors prescribed more medication to treat the new problems, but this
only led to further complications until Thomas was, more often than
not, flat on his back in pain.

What helped him was cannabis.

"Here is something I realized," Thomas said. "In my life, I didn't
drink. I knew alcohol might kill me. I was told marijuana would kill
me, so I didn't want to do that. Then they gave me meds and that
almost killed me, so now I'm back to marijuana."

Prescribed drugs have their benefits and their place, Burbank said,
but she also holds that "a drug is a drug is a drug."

She said many people are allergic to certain drug ingredients, and
some medications are just plain dangerous. Yet, doctors and
pharmacists are ignoring the safe and effective cannabis option.

"They are telling us these (other) drugs are safe. They aren't. There
is a better way," Burbank said. "We used to say, 'Go talk to your
doctor, talk to your pharmacist.' It's no longer enough to do this if
you want to be safe. You have to get over the thought that because the
doctor told me to and because (the medicine) is legal that it's safe.
You need to get online and do some more research. Just because a
doctor tells you to take a pill doesn't mean it's right for you."

Currently, the medical marijuana program is on rocky ground, so MAMA
is working to educate the people in power and the people in pain about
the benefits of cannabis and the dark side of legal medications.

Burbank pointed out that it is impossible to overdose on marijuana.
It's not so hard to overdose on legal drugs. She wants to stop the
flow of misinformation coming from school boards, political figures,
and "The War on Drugs."

Ivany said MAMA has a motto: Follow the money.

"Who is profiting from marijuana prohibition?" she asked.

"Somebody's getting rich," Thomas added.

"I think of doctors and pharmacists as representatives," Ivany said.
"It's a powder, it's a cream, it's a pill. It's all marketing and
sales."

"It's amazing how messed up it is," Thomas said. "It's like they're
trying to get rid of us."

He thinks part of the problem is the emotion that the subject of
medical marijuana brings to the surface.

"When you start being emotional, logic is gone," he said. "All I know
is this stuff works, and without it I wouldn't be here."

"The war on drugs has failed," Burbank said, citing the meth problem
that didn't exist in past years in the way that it exists now. "What
we're doing isn't working, and we need to change it around."

She wants people to "tell the truth, and stop the lies."

"People have to get their minds out of the '60s," Ivany added.
"(Medical marijuana) is not about getting stoned."

Feds raid downtown L.A. medical marijuana dispensary

Feds raid downtown L.A. medical marijuana dispensary
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By Stuart Silverstein, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
October 12, 2007
Federal agents seized marijuana and cash Thursday night from a medical
marijuana dispensary in the loft district near Little Tokyo, officials
said.

Twenty agents with the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration raided the
Arts District Healing Center in the 600 block of East 1st Street.

DEA spokesman Jose Martinez said the agents searched the two-story
building for 3 1/4 hours.

There were no arrests.

Authorities had not determined as of late Thursday night the amount of
cash and marijuana they seized, Martinez said.

The affidavit submitted by the DEA to search the offices stated that
marijuana is classified as a schedule-one controlled substance, "which
under federal law means that is not recognized for having any
medicinal value."

Steven Schectman, a lawyer for the center, said he wasn't surprised by the raid.

He said the DEA has threatened to take legal action against the
landlords unless they evict the marijuana dispensary, and that the
real estate dispute will be the subject of a hearing Monday.

Referring to the raid, Schectman said, "Unfortunately, we have
anticipated something like this could happen, given our past
experience with how the situation has been developing in Los Angeles
with the Drug Enforcement Agency and the courts."

California voters legalized marijuana's use for seriously ill people
with the passage of Proposition 215 in 1996. State laws legalizing
medical marijuana have been challenged. However, in 2005 the U.S.
Supreme Court reaffirmed the right of the federal government to wage
criminal prosecutions against patients and suppliers, in California
and other states where cannabis is legally prescribed by a doctor.

Montana’s most outspoken advocate for medical marijuana commits suicide

Prosser commits suicide

By: Jessie McQuillan
Posted: 10/25/2007

Robin Prosser didn't look or sound much like a fighter, but she was. A
mother and a musician, the Missoula woman also acted as Montana's most
outspoken advocate for medical marijuana, the only remedy that could
ease the ravaging pain of the lupus-like immunosuppressive disease she
endured for 23 years. Prosser's fight ended Oct. 18 when she took her
own life.

In recent months, Prosser, 50, would sit at the kitchen table in her
small apartment, pain welling up in her eyes, and talk quietly about
the victories and defeats the last several years had delivered.
Allergic to nearly every pharmaceutical that could render her chronic
pain bearable, she had learned that the political fate of medical
marijuana also carried intensely personal implications.

She remained proud of the 60-day hunger strike she undertook in 2002
to draw attention to the need for medical marijuana, the effort that
first brought her into the public eye. She spoke, too, of her 2004
agreement with the city of Missoula—when police charged her with
marijuana possession following a thwarted suicide attempt—that
deferred prosecution and al
lowed her to use marijuana before medical use was legalized.

During the subsequent campaign for medical marijuana, which won
support from 62 percent of Montana voters, she became a literal poster
child for the effort, appearing in campaign ads. And when the state
issued her a medical marijuana ID card, things seemed to be looking
up.

Then in March, federal Drug Enforcement Agency agents seized a small
shipment of medical marijuana in transit from Prosser's state-approved
caregiver. Though she was never criminally charged, Prosser was
crushed. She said caregivers became afraid to supply her with the
medicine she needed so badly.

In July, she penned an op-ed piece in the Billings Gazette, pleading
with Montana's politicians and her fellow citizens to speak out
against the DEA's actions and improve the lives of people like her.

"Give me liberty or give me death," she wrote. "Maybe the next
campaign ought to be for assisted-suicide laws in our state. If they
will not allow me to live in peace, and a little less pain, would they
help me to die, humanely?"

CC: No Extradition for the BC3!

No Extradition for the BC3!
Three Canadians face extradition to, and life imprisonment in, the United States - but they've never been there!
by Marc Emery

NEW! "No Extradition" folded pamphlet PDF files -- download page one and page two, then print and distribute copies everywhere! Phone (613) 957-4222, the Canadian Justice Department, and tell the Minister of Justice it would "shock your conscience" if Canadians Marc Emery, Greg Williams and Michelle Rainey were extradited to the United States, especially when a monetary fine for selling seeds, not jail time, was determined to be adequate punishment by the BC Supreme Court (R. vs. Hunter, 2000). If Canadians have broken the law in Canada, they should be given justice in Canada -- and if they cannot be found guilty in Canada, they should not be extradited to any other country for those same charges.

Marc Emery, Michelle Rainey, and Greg Williams are Canadian citizens who were heavily involved in anti-prohibition activitism for over ten years. The United States Justice Department and DEA want Canada's government to extradite these three political activists to face 10 years up to life in US prison! The extradition hearing has been scheduled to begin on November 5th, 2007. Canadians and Americans MUST do their part! Even a phone call makes a difference! Click the image below for five things you can do to help the BC3 fight extradition!

Ways to Help, Downloads, Links, Information, and More!

Download the NEW double-sided "No Extradition" handout (Word Document)

Donate to the Legal Defense Fund

Buy a "No Extradition" T-shirt

Purchase products from the CC Store

Download the "No Extradition" Petition (Word Document)

Download a PDF of the "No Extradition" logo

Visit the CC No Extradition forum for discussion and updates

Email Jodie Emery for the information handout (Word Document) or to get copies mailed

Write a letter to the Canadian Justice Minister and call the Justice Department at (613) 957-4222.

Send your filled-out petitions, letters, and donations to "No Extradition" 307 West Hastings Street, Vancouver BC, V6B 1H6. We need evidence for court to prove that there is strong opposition to extradition!


Use these banners to link to our website! Help prevent the extradition! (Right-click image and "Save" to your desktop.)

The following chart explains the Extradition Process, and shows where the BC3 are at in their battle against extradition.


Watch the 60 Minutes CBS broadcast about "Marc Emery, Prince of Pot" at Pot.tv


Watch the "DEA Raid Emery Seeds" collection of news and media clips from July 2005 on YouTube.com


DEA Administrator ADMITS that the arrest was POLITICALLY motivated!

Karen Tandy, the Administrator of the Drug Enforcement Administration, released this statement on her DEA stationery on July 29, the day of Marc Emery's arrest:

Major North American Marijuana Trafficker and Self-Proclaimed "Prince of Pot" aka Marc Scott Emery Arrested Today.

Today's DEA arrest of Marc Scott Emery, publisher of Cannabis Culture Magazine, and the founder of a marijuana legalization group, is a significant blow not only to the marijuana trafficking trade in the US and Canada, but also the marijuana legalization movement.

His marijuana trade and propagandist marijuana magazine have generated nearly $5 million a year in profits that bolstered his trafficking efforts, but those have gone up in smoke today.

Emery and his organization had been designated as one of the Attorney General's most wanted international drug trafficking organizational targets - one of only 46 in the world and the only one from Canada.

Hundreds of thousands of dollars of Emery's illicit profits are known to have been channeled to marijuana legalization groups active in the United States and Canada. Drug legalization lobbyists now have one less pot of money to rely on.

Read and download the official document here!

Five Things You Can Do to Help Save the BC3 from Extradition to the USA

Marc Emery, Michelle Rainey, and Greg Williams (the BC3) are Canadian citizens who were heavily involved in anti-prohibition activism in Canada for more than ten years. The United States is attempting to extradite these Canadian cannabis activists to the a country they've never been to and stand trial to face up to life in US federal prison. This is an insult to Canadian sovereignty and citizens' rights.

Here are five things that anyone can do to help prevent the BC3 from being extradited. Please take action and urge everyone you know to do the same.


1) Contact the Canadian Justice Minister Constantly!

Canada's Justice Minister is currently Robert Nicholson of the Conservative Party. It is largely his decision whether Canada will extradite the BC3, and that decision could come in the next few months or years. No matter where you are in the world, please contact the Justice Minister every week - we definitely need consistent vocal and written support from Canadians, Americans and the international community. Weekly phone calls, faxes, and handwritten letters that are polite and concise are effective political pressure.

The goal is to keep the Justice Department aware of the BC3 and the opposition to the extradition. Always be very polite, and say it would "shock your conscience" for Canadians to be extradited to the United States, a country they never went to, especially when the alleged crimes would not receive a jail sentence in Canada - and, if they have broken the law in Canada, they should be tried in Canada. When sending a letter, ask for a response from the Justice Minister.

Phone: (613) 957-4222
Fax: (613) 990-7255

Mailing Address:
The Honourable Minister of Justice and Attorney General of Canada
284 Wellington Street, Ottawa, Ontario
Canada K1A 0H8

2) Contact The Media

Please contact the following newspapers with a new letter every week, or every month. Send a short letter under 200 words that offers quick facts about the American efforts to extradite the BC3, why you oppose it, and why others should too. Don't send mass emails to all of the media, but email each individually. Write different letters about the same topic, or respond to an article that relates to the extradition battle. A number of Canadian newspaper emails are listed here, but a complete list of media outlets is available thanks to the Media Awareness Project at www.mapinc.org/resource/email.html

National Post: letters@nationalpost.com
Globe Mail: letters@globeandmail.ca
Vancouver Sun: sunletters@png.canwest.com
Vancouver Province: provletters@png.canwest.com
Victoria Times Colonist: letters@tc.canwest.com
Vancouver Courier: editor@vancourier.com
Burnaby Now: editorial@burnabynow.com
Calgary Herald: letters@theherald.canwest.com
Calgary Sun: callet@calgarysun.com
Edmonton Journal: letters@thejournal.canwest.com
Edmonton Sun: mailbag@edm.sunpub.com
Regina Leader-Post: letters@leaderpost.canwest.com
Hamilton Spectator: letters@thespec.com
Kamloops this week: ktw@bcnewsgroup.com
Kamloops Daily News: kamloopsnews@telus.net
Kelowna Capital News: edit@kelownacapnews.com
Langley Advance: editorial@langleyadvance.com
Langley Times: newsroom@langleytimes.com
Lethbridge Herald: letters@ac403.com
London Free Press: letters@lfpress.com
Montreal Gazette: letters@thegazette.canwest.com
Ottawa Citizen: letters@thecitizen.canwest.com
Ottawa Sun: oped@ott.sunpub.com
Saskatoon Star Phoenix: spnews@sp.canwest.com
Toronto Sun: editor@tor.sunpub.com
Victoria News: vicnews@vinewsgroup.com
Whitehorse Star: letters@whitehorsestar.com
Winnipeg Free Press: letters@freepress.mb.com
Winnipeg Sun: editor@wpgsun.com
Windsor Star: letters@thestar.canwest.com

3) Contact your Member of Parliament and Member of Legislative Assembly

If you are in Canada, then contact both your MP and your MLA by phone, mail, and email. Try to make an appointment for a personal visit for even more impact. Ask your representative to voice public opposition to the extradition requests. Tell your MP and MLA that Canada should not be sending Canadian activists to face life imprisonment in foreign countries when the accused persons never went to the requesting country and the accused crimes are not considered to be a jail-worthy offence in Canada. Remind them that the Canadian Government knowingly collected taxes from Marc Emery's seed sale income for a decade, and that Marc Emery is the leader of a legitimate political party, operated business openly and honestly, dealt only with consenting adults, caused no harm, kept no weapons or drugs, and once received a monetary fine for selling cannabis seeds in Canada - not prison, which the US seeks. Find your MLA at the following websites and your MP at www.parl.gc.ca.

BC: www.leg.bc.ca/mla
Alberta: www.assembly.ab.ca
Saskatchewan: www.legassembly.sk.cas
Manitoba: www.gov.mb.ca/legislature/members
ON: electionsontario.on.ca/fyed/en/form_page_en.jsp
Quebec: www.assnat.qc.ca/eng/membres/index.html
Newfoundland: www.hoa.gov.nl.ca/hoa/members
Nova Scotia: www.gov.ns.ca/legislature/members
PEI: www.assembly.pe.ca/members/index.php
NB: app.infoaa.7700.gnb.ca/gnb/pub/listmla1.asp


4) Donate Or Make Purchases

Marc, Michelle and Greg are accumulating expensive legal bills in order to fight the extradition. They are still determined to help the movement by spreading awareness about the drug war through the BC Marijuana Party, Cannabis Culture Magazine, Pot.tv, and the CCHQ store as always, but need legal fee support in this trying time. Please consider donating to or buying from the BC Marijuana Party (www.bcmarijuanaparty.com), Cannabis Culture Magazine (www.cannabisculture.com/newstore), or Marc Emery's Cannabis Culture Headquarters store (307 West Hastings Street, Vancouver BC, 604-682-1172).


5) Rally in your community

If you are in Canada, then try to put on a rally in your community to protest this incursion of the US Drug War into Canada. The focus of your rally should be that Canadians within Canada are not subject to US law and should not be extradited. US consulate offices are a good place to rally at, as are Canadian government buildings, and even parks and downtown areas. Please contact us at the BC Marijuana Party and Cannabis Culture Magazine to let us know what you are up to, and we can help promote your event. Use your rally to demonstrate that Canadian courts have decided selling marijuana seeds is a trivial offence that nets a fine, not prison time, and the Canadian government steadily collected sizable taxes from Marc Emery's seed sales for over 10 years. If Emery has broken the law in Canada then he should be charged and tried in Canada. If he has not broken laws in Canada then he should absolutely not be extradited to the US for a life sentence in US prison.

MARC EMERY
Who I Am, What I Was Doing, And Why I Did It

The following is an article by Marc Emery that appeared in Cannabis Culture #58 (December/January 05/06). It explains his history as a political and social activist in Canada; his reasons to run Marc Emery Direct Marijuana Seeds; how he funded global cannabis activist organizations and formal marijuana initiatives and campaigns; and what the US Drug War's influence on Canada has caused. Updated information has been added where necessary.


July 29th, 2005... I had that 'life flashing before me' moment. The frozen second in time when everything was sharp, clear, and signaled a great convergence of all my effort into this precise moment. "Marc Emery, you are under arrest for Extradition to The United States of America..." Every seed sold, all the millions of dollars I had given to the cause, every speech to free our people, every arrest, jailing and raid I had endured: it was all for this moment in time. "...for trafficking in marijuana seeds, for the production of marijuana, and for money laundering."

How Did This Happen?

In 1990, when I became a cannabis activist, all books, magazines, videos, pipes, bongs, everything about marijuana was illegal in Canada. As a bookseller at the City Lights Bookshop in London, Ontario, I was surprised and shocked to learn that the Canadian government had banned High Times Magazine, had police seize all copies of marijuana growing books (including the Canadian classic Grow Yer Own Stone), and pushed over 500 "head" shops across Canada into shutting down. There was no cannabis activist movement left in Canada. No books, no magazines, no activists, no hemp stores. Nothing. The United States activist movement had itself become muted through the Reagan and Bush years.

Into this strange wilderness, I decided that as a bookseller I had to defy this peculiar censorship law, which eliminated disseminating the truth about marijuana - a law that passed almost unanimously in the Canadian Parliament in 1987, with one lone dissenter: NDP Member of Parliament Svend Robinson. In the fall of 1990, I ordered through the mail a few copies of The Emperor Wears No Clothes, the classic book by Jack Herer on the suppression of cannabis hemp. Not available in Canada because of the ban (section 462.2 of the Criminal Code, which provided up to 6 months in jail, and/or up to a $100,000 fine for distributing books and any printed matter about marijuana or any "illicit" drug), I imported copies (illegally) and bought newspaper ads in the London Free Press, my hometown daily, to announce that I was breaking the literature ban on marijuana and welcomed the local police to arrest me.

This approach had always worked well for me in the ten years leading up to this time, as I went to court and jail after deliberately breaking various laws, such as the Sunday shopping ban, obscenity laws, and other Canadian social control laws that I personally, through civil disobediance, helped change.

The Day It All Came Down

(Read the July 29th DEA release admitting the political motivation behind Marc Emery's arrest here, and at the bottom of this page.)

On the day of my arrest on July 29, I was in the maritime province of Nova Scotia to speak at the Atlantic Hemp Festival held by Maritimers United for Medical Marijuana. While I was handcuffed and being delivered to the dank cells of the Halifax lock-up, Vancouver police raids were underway in my home, my offices, and the BCMP Bookstore in Vancouver. No marijuana or any drugs were found, and in fact, only approximately 5,000 seeds at most were available to be taken from the Seed Desk at the BCMP Bookstore.

Up to 50 police officers were used to comb the premises of all the locations. A battering ram was used to force the door at our office at 22 East Cordova Street. Various computers were taken, but little else was of interest to police. Warrants specified that any records relating to the seed business were to be seized. Presumably, police had access to phone records to calls made to Marc Emery Seeds. Otherwise, it wasn't a business where we kept records. We destroyed all information after sending out orders.

In my cell in the Halifax lock-up, I knew that my life had entered a critical and inevitable phase. I have always been very, very transparent in the way I have conducted a career I have often described as "revolutionary retail" or "capitalist activism". From the day I arrived in Vancouver on March 1st 1994, I was going to change the way marijuana activism existed. Even in 1994, everything about cannabis and used to enjoy cannabis was still illegal in Canada, and I was determined to make an aggressive change in this landscape.

Penniless after losing all of my money in an ill-advised house-building project in Indonesia, I arrived for the first time in my life in Vancouver, British Columbia, determined to build a movement that used a retail model to generate money that would feed a vast network of activism. Within days of getting off the plane, I was selling High Times magazine and a variety of banned marijuana grow books that had been fronted to me by a distributor. I sold door-to-door, to strangers on the street, to magazine stores, to bookstores, to students. I would make on average $1 profit per item, and fortunately, after 6 years of non-availability in Canada, there was a pent-up demand for marijuana information.

My two children, my spouse and I lived on $20 a day for food, and all other money was put back into these books and magazines. Within one year, I was distributing 2,000 copies a month of High Times magazine and was wholesaling and mail order retailing over 40 books about marijuana and other "illicit" entheogens.

After selling these products on the street for 3 months, I was offered a former Communist bookshop (that had been subject of a firebombing!) for $500 first month's rent. As long as I cleaned the heavily damaged building up, the landlord said my "hemp revolution business", as I explained it to him, was fine. On July 7, 1994, I opened the HEMP BC retail store and began a decade of principled, purposeful lawbreaking, with every action aimed at ending the marijuana prohibition by any peaceful means possible.

Everything Is On The Line

On July 29th, while the police were raiding the various places they believed seeds and records were stored, activists like David Malmo-Levine, Chris Bennett, Dana Larsen, and brave others protested the attack with a very noisy street demonstration. The media, informed immediately by Chris Bennett and the Cannabis Culture magazine team, descended on the scene at BCMP Headquarters.

Within hours, everyone in British Columbia was bombarded by media with the news that the US government was seeking to extradite me and two friends to the USA, for my seed-selling ways. It was clear the potential penalties were severe if I were to be extradited and prosecuted in the US, probably a life imprisonment. Under Drug Kingpin legislation in the United States, selling over 60,000 seeds qualifies for the death penalty. The manufacture or distribution of 60,000 kilograms of marijuana, 60,000 plants or 60,000 seeds all are included in death penalty provisions of the medieval law passed by a Newt Gingrich congress. I would be the first person who could qualify under this recent law to be executed for the activity I have clearly done with the tacit approval of everyone in Canada.

Revenue Canada received $578,000 in personal income taxes (1999 to 2005) on income that was explicitly from the sale of marijuana seeds, and they ALWAYS were aware of it. It said "Marijuana Seed Vendor" on my tax returns. I explained my entire banking and money systems and always gave income tax all access to my accounts so they could verify everything I said was true. I told them the Money Mart location where I cashed some money orders; my bank accounts were explained so they could track the flow of money. I relayed how expenses and disbursements took place in the incriminating world of seeds. They knew how it all worked because I had nothing to hide. The government of Canada received about $378,000 of this money; the provincial government of British Columbia received about $200,000.

As for politicians: every Member of Parliament in Canada, all 305, had a free subscription to our magazine, which often their assistants, if not the Member themselves, read and perused, for eight years. My seed catalogue was in every issue. They knew it was there. No one ever complained to me or to the police about it. Former MP Svend Robinson said that when he was New Democratic Party Health Critic he asked Health Canada where medical cannabis exemptees were supposed to obtain seeds. "Health Canada said to go to the internet and buy seeds there." And that's what he told medical patients to do: buy seeds on the internet. In fact, that's what Health Canada also told others in letters that we have from 2003.

NDP leader Jack Layton came to my home in November 2003 and did a beautiful interview on www.Pot.tv. I think Jack Layton is a wonderful guy. I think NDP Justice Critic Libby Davies has done a sterling job. If I had any kind of reputation as a "drug dealer", do you think a man who is a serious contender for Prime Minister is going to some drug dealer's house to publicly ask for support? I was asked to testify before the Senate Subcommittee in both 1996 and 2002 as to my views on legalizing marijuana. Do you think they would ask any known drug dealer to attend?

When the Wall Street Journal put me on the front page of its massively influential newspaper in a very favorable article on Dec. 10, 1995, Quentin Hardy, the journalist who wrote it, told me six editors were assigned to check out my background. "They talked to your teachers, your neighbors, business associates, your parents. They are NOT going to let anyone with even a whiff of 'drug dealer' appear on that front page." Nine years later, Mr. Hardy came to British Columbia and wrote the definitive piece on the British Columbia marijuana industry for Forbes Magazine, and I personally introduced him to many in the industry while he did that piece.

I spoke at IDEA CITY in 2001 and 2003. I spoke on the same stage as former Prime Ministers John Turner and Kim Campbell, and I was the marijuana provider to many famous Canadians at the Friday Night IDEA CITY Party at muchmusic/CHUM TV. In my speeches I talked about the incredible work in helping 18 year old Webster Alexander in Alabama, having his sentence for selling two ounces of pot reduced from an unbelievable 36 years to one year served on weekends. I talked about the amazing work at my Iboga Therapy House (that seed money had kept operating), and how we helped heavily drug addicted persons for free with amazing results. I talked about my mission in life and how I had developed this "seed thing" that paid for immense amounts of activism.

My very transparent manifesto, "How to Overgrow the Government Through Revolutionary Retail" was published in the first issue of Cannabis Culture magazine. I was written up and covered in TIME Magazine, MacLean's Magazine, The Economist, the Wall Street Journal, the Washington Post, the New York Times, Rolling Stone, Seattle's Post Intelligencier, CBS' 60 Minutes, CNN, Mexico's La Reforma, The Times of India, and hundreds of other publications around the globe. I never received one letter from anyone in 10 years asking me to stop selling seeds. No one on the streets of Vancouver or anywhere in Canada where I have spoken extensively (22 cities in 2003, 19 cities in 2004) has ever approached me and said, "I don't like what you are doing by selling seeds". I have never received a letter or a phone call or correspondence of any kind from anyone in Canada asking or demanding that I stop the sale and distribution of seeds.

Since moving to BC over 11 years ago, I never owned vehicles, property, bonds, investments, assets, or off-shore accounts. I leased everything on a month-by-month basis, including my vehicle and my apartment. If I had money stashed, the police or Income Tax people would have found it. I was watched extensively. I presumed my cell phone was always monitored. When, in late July, the DEA undercover agent posing as seed buyer tried to get me to sell her ten pounds of pot over the phone, I refused and told her that I always assumed my cell phone was monitored, so how could she be so foolish and naive? When she asked again at a later time, I lectured her at length. Not only did I not sell pot, she was being very reckless to even think about importing pot to the USA.

The DEA even has a subscription to Cannabis Culture, with their money orders on US Department of Justice cheques. I figured if the US government got that pissed off, they'd just ask the Vancouver Police to raid me, like in the 1996 to 1998 period.

I was always raided after appearing in A-list American media. A month after the Wall Street Journal: raided. A month after Rolling Stone: raided. Two months after the CNN Visits Canada's Prince of Pot special in October 1997: raided. The police took a million dollars in store and business assets in total, but I was not even charged on either occasion, and received small fines from the courts when I was charged on two others. The last fine I got for selling seeds in 1998 was $700 per count; seven counts, $5,000 in total. From a $700 fine for seeds in 1998, to life imprisonment without parole or the death penalty in 2005... that's an outrageous contrast.

Personal and Political Progress

A lot of good was accomplished through all that struggle, trial and tribulation. In 1994, there were no hemp stores, no activist activity, no medical marijuana program, no pot retail industry, not even legally obtained books and magazines about marijuana in Canada. Eleven years later, there are over 75 hemp activist stores; literature and magazines were made legal; medical marijuana is legal; the hemp industry is in a great revival. Marijuana legalization and the drug war have been discussed daily in the Canadian media for the past ten years. Regulations continue to improve for Canada's medical cannabis program.

Phillip Owen, a former Mayor of Vancouver (1993 to 2001) was at one time a very vocal prohibitionist in office. He denounced me in the New York Times. But by the end of his third term, he became a brilliant and articulate anti-prohibitionist after hearing me speak throughout local elections and in the media.

In December 2002, the White House Drug Czar came to Vancouver for a highly publicized speech at the Vancouver Board of Trade to set the Mayor and other "legalizers" straight. Before his speech began, I went up and asked the Drug Czar if I could have a photograph of us together; when he asked "and who are you?" a photo was snapped as I said, "My name is Marc Emery, I'm the publisher of Cannabis Culture Magazine." He turned beet-red and was hustled away by his agents. As he spoke on stage afterwards, we heckled him when he rattled off his catalog of lies about marijuana. There were five tables of police at that speech, two tables of US Consulate people, over 50 Secret Service agents protecting Walters. Oh, he remembers me all right!

The next day, former Mayor Phillip Owen, Mayor-elect Larry Campbell and city councilors met with Walters. Owen later told the Vancouver Courier paper "It was the most intense meeting of my life. There is no one more uninformed about drugs than the Drug Czar." Members of City Council recently told me Walters and his lieutenants threatened, screamed at and insulted the elected Vancouver officials, and guaranteed that if Vancouver pursued legal marijuana policies, the border would be shut down to Canadian commerce heading for America.

Current Mayor (and appointed Senator to Canada's Parliament) Larry Campbell was my rival for Mayor in the Vancouver 2002 election. I got to speak about legalization on over 15 occasions in his presence. He was elected. He spoke at the Beyond Prohibition 2004 Conference in which a grant of $18,000 from Marc Emery Direct Seeds went to the BC Civil Liberties Association to hold the event. That conference is where Mr. Campbell famously and momentously announced that marijuana should legalized, taxed and regulated, and that prohibition should end.

I participated in elections in 1996 (Mayor of Vancouver); 2000 (Canadian Marijuana Party, federal election); 2001 (BC Marijuana Party, provincial election); 2002 (Mayor of Vancouver); 2005 (BC Marijuana Party, provincial election). During the 2005 BC provincial election, Vancouver City Councilman Tim Stevenson invited me to a fundraiser. He introduced me proudly to his supporters at the fundraiser and said "Marc is here to lend his support because he knows I believe in legalization". I did not run against him in that riding because Tim is a good man; but again, do you think if there was any taint anywhere in my life that these people would introduce me to crowds of key supporters?

Adriane Carr is leader of the BC Green Party. In 2002, the BC Greens launched a petition drive to get proportional representation on the ballot as a people's initiative. The BC Greens didn't have the money, but I believed in the cause so I personally gave Adrianne Carr $7,000 to finance the petition drive. That was money from my only source of income - marijuana seed sales!

I never met a person, government agency, politician, tax department, or any charitable or non-governmental agency who refused any money from me, even though I was world famous as a marijuana seed seller. Banks opened accounts and issued credit cards, and I was honest and candid with every last one of them.

Over 10 years, I gave just under $4,000,000 (four million dollars) to North American and international activist organizations, activist politicians, ballot initiatives throughout the United States, referendums, court challenges, Supreme Court of Canada challenges, refugees, bail costs, legal defense funds, political parties, individuals, drug addiction clinics, media, medical bills for activists (Terence McKenna, Jack Herer), Compassion Clubs (legal bills and start-up money), Hemp fests, conferences, Global Marijuana Marches (2000 to 2005), full page anti-prohibition ads in Canadian newspapers, HEMP BC Legal Assistance Centre... and the list goes on. It's an extraordinary record of unparalleled distribution of the proceeds from our beloved plant.

A month after Walters' visit, the Vancouver Police Department - who behaved so chummily with Walters on the evening of, and days following his speech - launched an investigation of my seed business with the intent of laying charges. Over 6 months, the VPD scoped out my mail order business, monitored my seed office, bought some seeds undercover, and in the summer of 2003 - during my very successful Summer of Legalization Tour - went to the Crown Attorney to lay charges. But at that time, marijuana was legal to possess in Canada and it was doubtful if seeds were actually illegal. The Crown Attorney refused to proceed with charges.

This had the impact of infuriating the Vancouver Police and John Walters. With the tacit approval of BC Solicitor-General Richard Coleman, the Vancouver Police investigation file was handed over to the DEA in October 2003. The DEA continued the investigation, committing substantial resources and finances to it. The DEA proceeded to order seeds by mail, and comb the records of American growers who were busted with evidence of seed purchases from me.

On April 27, 2004, while I was on a 22-city tour of Canada to promote support for NDP leader Jack Layton, arsonists tried to destroy the BCMP Headquarters and severely damaged it (the Blunt Brothers building next door was entirely destroyed). The Vancouver Police "investigation" revealed nothing, and it has long been thought to be the act of DEA or Vancouver police agents.

After the VPD had failed in their efforts to charge me locally and extinguish our headquarters, I was punished by being jailed for 62 days in Saskatoon Correction Centre on August 19th, 2004 for the crime of passing one joint in Saskatoon earlier that year. I did the same job that Martha Stewart did in her prison: I was the toilet cleaner and janitor for the senior administrative staff of the jail. In October 2004, while still in jail, the DEA started coming to my store to buy from the seed desk. They were assisted by the Vancouver Police Department and BC Solicitor-General Coleman in every way.

On May 6, 2005, while I was campaigning in an election against Solicitor-General Coleman, a grand jury in Seattle, Washington indicted me for seed selling, conspiring to help Americans produce marijuana, and distributing my money (money laundering).

Under the Mutual Legal Assistance Treaty - which the US pressures every country to sign - the Attorney-General of Canada of Canada, then Irwin Cotler, agreed to allow my arrest for Extradition to the United States to face trial for my activities in Canada. Irwin Cotler, the former Canadian Justice Minister and Attorney General in the previous Liberal government, was himself a famous human rights activist.

No one in Canada has ever been sentenced to jail for selling seeds. Only two people have ever been fined: myself in 1996 and 1998; and Ian Hunter, fined $200 in the year 2000.

Now Canada has a Conservative Party government that believes all marijuana people who grow and sell and pass joints should go to jail! The Canadian Minister of Justice and Attorney-General, Conservative Robert Nicholson, may be the one who holds my fate in the balance. If the BC Supreme Court commits me for extradition after the Extradition Hearing, a five day affair beginning May 28, 2007, then Attorney-General Nicholson holds my fate in his hands.

Depending on how many people write, email or call the politicians of Canada, Robert Nicholson will decide if the government of Canada agrees to the Extradition. The maximum term of incarceration for murder in Canada is 25 years, yet under US federal sentencing guidelines, I would receive minimum 17 to 21 years for being, to quote DEA boss Karen Tandy of the on the day of my arrest, "designated as one of [the US] Attorney-General's most-wanted international drug trafficking organizational targets - one of only 46 in the world and the only one in Canada." I'd get an additional mandatory minimum of 10 years on the money laundering charge.

The head of the DEA fumes with contempt in her media release, reiterating four times that her principle concern is with legalization activities. She uses phrases like "publisher of Cannabis Culture Magazine, and the founder of a marijuana legalization group", "is a significant blow ... to ... the marijuana legalization movement", "hundreds of thousands of dollars ... are known to have been channeled to marijuana legalization groups active in the United States and Canada", "drug legalization lobbyists now have one less pot of money to rely on".

Additionally, the DEA head referred to me as the only target of the DEA in Canada, virtually making me the biggest "kingpin" in all of Canada! She even called Cannabis Culture a "propagandist" magazine!

On CNN's Lou Dobbs program on March 30, 2005, the DEA claimed I was responsible for the manufacture of 100,000 pounds of marijuana for every year I was in the seed business. Eleven years of revolutionary seed retail activism means the DEA is claiming I am responsible for 1,100,000 pounds of marijuana, with a conservative wholesale value of $3,000,000,000 (three billion dollars). If you figure that aspiring hip hop performer Weldon Angelos got 55 years for one ounce of pot, what do think the sentence is going to be for a man the DEA and US Attorney-General Alberto Gonzales claims is the largest marijuana producer of all time ever prosecuted in the US criminal justice system?

I tell Canadians that to let me be extradited to the United States means Canada will never see me alive again. To the DEA, I am the leader of the movement that seeks to thwart, defy, undermine them and end their reign of terror over the cannabis culture. They are never going to let me walk and talk and campaign against them once I am in their clutches.

For What It's Worth

Overgrow the Government. Inherent in that beautiful phrase are so many ideals and glories of a co-operative, peaceful society. Plant the seeds of freedom. Not overthrow, which speaks of violent conflict, but overgrow, using God's greatest plant and the enlightenment that comes from ingesting marijuana to further a peaceful, democratic, revolution based on tolerance and love and unity of all peoples. Plants, not violence. Reason, not murderous incarceration. Personal freedom, not Nazi-like paramilitary violence.

I am being punished for my success. I have achieved much in my eleven years in British Columbia. Clearly, the very dark and powerful forces emanating from the White House believe they have the upper hand, that they have stopped our revolution. This is the time when the Bush-Walters White House is making the most aggressive attack on our culture ever, and not just on me.

In March 2004, my wonderful friend Mike Smith received a 30-year sentence in an Oklahoma federal prison for growing 200 plants. He had already served six years on a previous cultivation offence. His wife, Yvonne Toy, received a 15-year sentence, her first offence ever, for those same 200 plants.

The Bush White House, the DEA, and US police forces are arresting more Americans for marijuana than ever before, pursuing marijuana people with a frenzy never before seen in history. On October 17, 2005, the FBI revealed 771,608 persons were arrested for marijuana violations in 2004. The total is the highest ever and comprised 44.2 percent of all drug arrests in the United States. Since 1965, 17 million Americans have been arrested for marijuana offences, and arrests have skyrocketed in the past 12 years.

US Marijuana Arrests by Year
2004: 771,608
2003: 755,187
2002: 697,082
2001: 723,627
2000: 734,498
1999: 704,812
1998: 682,885
1997: 695,200
1996: 641,642
1995: 588,963
1994: 499,122
1993: 380,689

Immediately upon my arrest in Halifax on July 29th, reaction was swift and loud throughout Canada. The Vancouver Sun had a screaming headline "UNCLE SAM ORCHESTRATES VANCOUVER POT BUSTS". It was all over every Canadian media. I was kept in 4 different jails over 7 days, and saw none of the coverage until I was released on bail on August 5.

As I was being arrested, the largest issue ever of Cannabis Culture Magazine was rolling off the presses. By the time I was released, the magazine with the 12-page Marc Emery Seed catalog was printed, but could not be distributed until the readers were warned not to order seeds from my now-shut down seed business. A sticker was printed and individually attached to all 75,000 copies, and that took over 30 days to complete, delaying the release of the last issue by a full month.

I was now in the most difficult bind in my life. My only source of income was terminated, and I had to make Cannabis Culture Magazine, POT.TV and the BCMP Bookstore self-sufficient immediately. I had to find tens of thousands of dollars in legal fees (obtaining bail the first week took $18,000 in legal fees, an additional $20,000 cash bail for a cash requirement of $38,000 before I even got out of jail). I was without any income and had massive problems to deal with. I immediately had to lay off employees, move out of my apartment, return my rented car, and move in with my assistant editor (and now wife) Jodie. I had to survive on as little as possible; my only income was modest charity from supporters and activists.

With 21 arrests, 17 jailings, and now six raids for marijuana related activity under my belt, I feel experienced enough to tackle my greatest challenge ever. Facing brutal finances, huge legal bills, and life imprisonment without parole for something no one in Canada has ever even gone to jail for, I still have to provide focused, calm and convincing leadership.

I've done a record number of interviews with North American and world media since then. The CBS newsmagazine 60 Minutes (twice) aired a segment to its twelve million viewers about my struggle to legalize marijuana. I am reaching new audiences: older people, Canadian nationalists, and - to my joy - people who don't smoke pot, and do not ordinarily identify with the cannabis culture. The staggering punishment to be meted out to me is common in the United States for marijuana offences, and many people in Canada are realizing this for the first time.

From September 10 to September 24 in 2005, there were demonstrations on my behalf at Canadian and US embassies and consulates in 43 cities around the world. Mapinc.org has archives of over 300 letters printed in newspapers condemning my extradition, and over 400 newspapers and publications have written about my work and the extradition request.

I tell people now that this extradition attempt is a blessing, because it has galvanized the world movement for cannabis peace. It has given me an even stronger personal urge to have marijuana legalized in Canada within two years, and I am given opportunity in regular media exposure to be a proud spokesperson for our great culture. I am not afraid of the task ahead of me. I am not afraid of jail for the rest of my life, undoubtably painful as that would be. I don't fear prison rape or abuse or suffering or lonliness, though those miseries will no doubt be present in a US federal prison. My fear is that the marijuana people will continue to be taken away to lives of ruin and despair by a murderous police state. My fear is that Canada will be absorbed as a compliant puppet state of the US War on Drugs. My fear is that the DEA, with offices in 65 nations around the Earth, will have more and more citizens from other countries extradited to the USA to face draconian punishments f!
or the rest of their lives.

I fear for Michelle Rainey and Greg Williams, facing extradition for simply being in my activist organization. Greg, aka Marijuana Man of Pot.tv, is a fine and wonderful friend who brings knowledge, joy and pleasure to everyone he meets. He is being punished for being a supporter of me and the movement. Michelle is the most selfless activist I have ever known. A fantastic woman, she suffers daily with Crohns Disease, and needs marijuana to control her very damaged and disabled organs, yet has helped hundreds - if not thousands - of people with her unrelenting effort to make marijuana legal.

Michelle has been my great ally in this struggle, and she surely should be nominated for sainthood. She is so worthy of your support. She MUST NOT be extradited to a US jail. She will die in horrible pain there. My American friends, my Canadian friends, this cannot be permitted to happen. A terrible injustice will have occurred if Michelle Rainey exists in pain and torture in an American jail. There will be terrible karma in the world if one of God's most beautiful souls is allowed to be destroyed by apathy and cowardice in her most critical time of need. The people can save her from extradition, if they speak out to the Canadian Minister of Justice. Speak to power, my friends; her life depends on it.

The months ahead will be filled with unprecedented personal challenges for me. I will try to speak on behalf of our culture with passion, reason and good values. I will be interviewed extensively, and I hope I am a spokesman and activist and leader you can be proud of.

I certainly could use your help. I need an army of activists writing letters, petitioning, wearing NO EXTRADITION T-shirts, demonstrating in front of Canadian consulates and embassies, voting in elections, joining a political party in Canada or the United States to make your views on prohibition heard. I certainly need any money you can give. If you believe my record of service to our culture merits your support, then I tell you: we need your support.

Marijuana is a 7 to 15 billion-dollar a year industry in Canada, where hundreds of thousands - perhaps half a million - people are growing and selling marijuana. Millions and millions of Canadians and Americans consume this marijuana. Canadian growers, dealers, and seed sellers deal with Americans every day.

In the aftermath of my arrest for activity I did here in Canada, it is apparent any activist or handler of seeds, medical marijuana, or commercial marijuana could be extraditable. If you have any connection to any marijuana transaction that traces to the USA, you are liable to be considered party to a conspiracy to import marijuana into the United States. That's certainly bringing the US drug war into Canada in an incredible and dangerous way. Everyone in Canada's cannabis culture is now at much greater risk because of this precedent.

Yet Canadians don't want this barbaric drug war. After 10 years of our activism, Canadians now overwhelmingly reject fines, jail time or any punishment as an option for marijuana possession, according to a NORML Canada November 2004 nation-wide poll. A majority of Canadians favor a taxed and regulated system of marijuana distribution.

While Canada pursues an independent approach to cannabis laws and prohibition, away from the US drug war model, there is hope for both Canadians and Americans of the cannabis culture. If Canada becomes free from prohibition, then American prohibition will fall. But if the United States government is allowed to triumph with intimidation, blackmail, and increased arrests in Canada, stifling our progress, and sending Canada backwards, then liberation for all North America is that much more elusive.

Continually Yours,

~ Marc Scott Emery

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PO Box 15, 199 West Hastings, Vancouver BC,
Canada V6B 1H4

Thursday, October 11, 2007

Marijuana prevents cancer (Federal Research)

Marijuana prevents cancer (Federal Research)
Thu, 10/11/2007 - 17:04 — dreagen

The United States Government has done research on Marijuana in the
past and has thrown out many research topics because they prove the
benefits of Marijuana. There have been Studies funded by the US
Government that have encouraged the citizens to question the current
laws.
Growing up in the 80's during the Reagan years hearing Nancy talking
about saying no to drugs made me very scared to try Marijuana. I also
thought that all Marijuana users were worthless and lazy and would
become a burden to society. After going to the Netherlands and trying
Marijuana because of chronic pain I realized, "this is not that bad."
When I came back to the United States of America I decided it was time
I did a little research on my own about Marijuana. I soon Found out
that US Veterans Affairs Scientists did research to find out if
excessive use of Marijuana as a teen would damage your life. They did
this by surveying twins were one was a heavy user of Marijuana and the
other did not use Marijuana more than 5 times. They Found, "Marijuana
use had no significant impact on physical or mental health care
utilization, health-related quality of life, or current
socio-demographic characteristics." (Eisen SE et al. Does Marijuana
Use Have Residual Adverse Effects on Self-Reported Health Measures,
Socio-Demographics or Quality of Life? A Monozygotic Co-Twin Control
Study in Men. Addiction. Vol. 97 No. 9. p.1083-1086. Sept. 1997)
The Government provided funding to Federal researchers to study the
effect of THC on Cancer induced rats. These rats were treated for
Leukemia and lung cancer with canaboids and THC found in Marijuana
that increased their life span and decreased the size of the tumors.
(Journal of the National Cancer Institute. Sept. 1975. p. 597-602) In
1994 federal researchers studied rats again by giving them massive
doses of THC to look for cancer and other toxicity in the rats.
Reasearch showed that the more THC the rat received the fewer tumors
grew. (NTP Technical Report On The Toxicology And Carcinogenesis
Studies Of 1-Trans- Delta-9-Tetrahydrocannabinol, CAS No. 1972-08-3,
In F344/N Rats And B6C3F(1) Mice, Gavage Studies) Again in 1997
research funded by the federal government came close to proving
Marijuana can prevent cancer. This research followed 65,000 patients
for close to 10 years to study the effects of Cigarette smoking,
Marijuana Smoking and Non-Smokers on Lung Cancer. This showed that
Marijuana smokers did not have an increase in chances to get lung
cancer and also showed that they were at a lower percentage to get
lung cancer than non-smokers. (Sidney, S. et al. Marijuana Use and
Cancer Incidence (California, United States). Cancer Causes and
Control. Vol. 8. Sept. 1997, p. 722-728.) Over a year ago the federal
government gave Donald Tashkin funds to research Marijuana use and
Lung Cancer. This found again that those Heavy Marijuana users had a
decrease risk for Lung Cancer. (Tashkin D. Marijuana Use and Lung
Cancer: Results of a Case-Control Study. American Thoracic Society
International Conference. May 23, 2006.)
Over the years the federal government has tried to teach that
Marijuana was the most dangerous drugs available with lies and
deceptions. The federal Government has been giving grants to research
the dangers and hazards of Marijuana but have ended up proving that
Marijuana is not only a great medication but that it is helpful to
prevent cancers.

Hazy stances

Hazy stances

http://www.idsnews.com/news/story.aspx?id=45218&comview=1

Amanda Lowry | IDS | 10/11/2007
I personally believe that there should be a requirement that every
politician who runs for public office must have smoked pot at some
point. Even if that experience doesn't make the politician want to
legalize it, he or she will at least realize how dangerous it isn't.

My position on this issue was only strengthened this week after
watching a CNN video of Mitt Romney, in typical 2008 Republican
front-runner style, dismiss a multiple sclerosis sufferer advocating
that medical marijuana arrests be stopped. The MS sufferer caught
Romney on camera and explained to him that, although he is against
legalizing marijuana, the smoked form of the drug is the only pain
reliever for his lifelong illness that he can use without getting
sick.

His question, then, was "Will you arrest me and my doctors if I get
medical marijuana prescribed to me?"

Romney dodged the question, answering, "I'm not in favor of medical
marijuana being legal." After that, he returned to his mission of
shaking hands with as many rally attendees as possible, ignoring
journalists who pressed him to answer the man's question.

Romney's attitude toward the MS patient exemplifies the 2008
Republican front-running presidential candidates' chronic dodging of
the issue of medical marijuana arrests and raids on medical marijuana
dispensaries, which have been common since the U.S. Supreme Court
decided Raich v. Vernon in 2005. The verdict allowed federal officers
to arrest sellers and users of medical marijuana, regardless of
individual state laws.

Determined to at least appear concerned for everyone's well-being, the
candidates have tried to make their anti-medical marijuana stance
appear justified through pointing out the drug's safety issues, health
risks and its potential to proliferate recreational drug use.

But that appearance falls apart when someone brings up the topic of
medical marijuana arrests and dispensary raids. Standing firm in the
belief that cancer patients and well-meaning doctors should be tossed
in the slammer doesn't exude that same sense of compassion about
public health.

So to avoid the hypocrisy, the candidates draw attention away from the
arrests and toward the drug's risks.

When a woman at a New Hampshire conference last week asked John McCain
whether he would legally allow her use of medical marijuana, he
replied:

"You may be one of the unique cases in America that only medical
marijuana can relieve pain from ... Every medical expert I know of,
including the (American Medical Association), says there are much more
effective and much more, uh, better treatments for pain."

And last week at another conference, when a woman asked Rudy Giuliani
about his position on the raids, he, too, avoided the topic and talked
about the FDA's evaluation of cannabis alternatives.

The health and safety issues medical marijuana presents are important
topics for political discussion. But the discussion that needs to come
first is the one about people who are getting arrested for trying to
put themselves out of agony while hurting no one else – and how to
stop those arrests.

Dear Mr. Romney, will you arrest me?

Dear Mr. Romney, will you arrest me?

contributed by Mike Overson, editor-in-chief

source:http://eagle.ceu.edu/php-pages/article.php?article_id=1158

Over the weekend I was watching Fox News Network when a story caught
my eye. Various people were interviewing Mitt Romney, republican
presidential hopeful, when one man's question caught my attention. The
man asked whether or not Romney would arrest him as well as his
doctors because of medical marijuana usage.

"I don't support medical marijuana" was Romney's response.

Answer the question though, whether you support the states' rights to
govern themselves is not the question. Will you in your presidency, if
elected, continue to crackdown on doctors that are convinced this
plant is a natural beneficial way to cope with cancer and other
ailments? What about those patients who do not show signs of
improvement except when marijuana is used? It seems to me that as a
voter and more importantly an American, I have the right to know where
potential leaders stand on this and other issues. For the sake of
being fair, I would implore all candidates to answer that question as
well.

For too long the federal government has had free reign over the
states. Medical marijuana is a huge topic of debate in this election.
The time of "stupid pot-heads" is coming to an end. People are fed up
with being stepped on, abused and ignored. More and more states are
ratifying their own laws concerning this.

But how is it that the feds continue to abuse their limitless
resources and get away with anything badges? I think it is appalling
the president has to ask Congress for money to support our troops. If
anyone should get what they need and not have to wait for our
country's "democratic" process to decide its fate, the military should
be it. How is it that the Drug Enforcement Agency has a blank check?
If you are the DEA and you need money to bust non-violent drug
offenders you don't ask, you sometimes give receipts after the fact.
Only when pressured will the DEA publicize its spending. While our
troops across the world need better armor they have to wait to maybe,
just maybe get new equipment before their deployment ends.

But back to arresting people with legitimate licenses. As long as
patients abide by laws set forth by their resident state, the federal
government should step back and let the state worry about the pandemic
this issue created. With all those patients using this devil substance
in the privacy of their own homes, I'm waiting for these cancer ridden
citizens to start pillaging different cities. Twelve medical states
are bravely doing what no one else is daring to do. Sticking it to the
man.

While the DEA continues to raid pharmacies in hopes of crushing what
it sees as a peasant rebellion more and more people are getting these
licenses and supporting the movement, which is medical marijuana.

The majority of the DEA's endless power comes from the
administration's lack of caring. If a president doesn't care that
hundreds of thousands of people are being incarcerated for simple
marijuana possession charges, then the DEA will continue to be
government thugs with no fear of repercussion. My hope is this, one
day the people of America will care about who leads them; who makes
the laws, who enforces laws and who decides that pursuing happiness is
wrong if a certain substance the government chooses is illegal is
used.

So, Mr.. Romney, will you arrest that man and thousands like him? Will
you condemn people to a life in prison for not obeying federal laws?
Why is it that states have to bend to the power of the federal
government? Shouldn't states have rights to decide constitutional
matters?

If someone disagrees with my point of view then I am happy. This
country guarantees a right to say what you think. If that right is not
taken advantage of then this country will soon end up like countless
others around the world. Places where free speech is looked down upon
almost as much as women in some religious countries. If the United
States of America ever ends up like those places, the world will be
hell on Earth.

Send Mike Overson a comment at m.overson@ceu.edu

Judge in medical marijuana case scolds state agency

Judge in medical marijuana case scolds state agency
BY SARA REED
SaraReed@coloradoan.com

A District Court judge in Fort Collins issued a strongly-worded rebuke
today to the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment for
not complying with a court order related to a medical marijuana case.

Chief Judge James Hiatt threatened the agency with a contempt citation
and told an attorney from the Colorado Attorney General's office to
turn over information on medical marijuana patients for whom James and
Lisa Masters of Fort Collins acted as primary caregivers.

ADVERTISEMENT

"Your client (individuals from the Colorado Department of Public
Health and Environment) needs to get appropriate appellate relief,
comply with the order or, option three, someone is going to wind up in
jail," Hiatt told Anne Holton, an attorney with the attorney general's
office, during a scheduled hearing today.

The Masters, who are medical marijuana patients, were arrested and
charged with cultivation and distribution of marijuana last summer.
Those charges were dropped in June after it was ruled the search of
their home was illegal.

Now the couple has been fighting to get back the equipment and plants
seized from their home more than a year ago. However, that process was
delayed until late next month because the depart-ment still refuses to
produce the records.

As part of the process, Hiatt required prosecutors to subpoena the
records from the health de-partment, which administers the medical
marijuana program. The agency appealed to the Colorado Supreme Court
but that was denied.

Amendment 20, passed in November 2000 to establish Colorado's medical
marijuana program, re-quires the department to maintain a confidential
database of medical marijuana patients. Holton said that privacy
should be balanced against the prosecution's need for the records. The
prosecution's need for the records does not rise to the level to
justify breaching the confidentiality of the medical marijuana
program, she argued.

"The process we are in now is not a criminal proceeding," Holton said.
"The DA's interest is not in prosecuting but in retaining seized
evidence."

Hiatt disagreed and at one point called the delay unfair to the
parties involved. Hiatt gave the department until 5 p.m. Monday to
turn over the records. If the records have not been submitted by that
time, Hiatt said he would issue a contempt citation.

"You can't just say 'we still disagree with the order,' " he said.

Rob Corry, one of the attorneys representing the Masters, said after
the hearing he was gratified that Hiatt and prosecutor Michael Pierson
seem to be taking the matter so seriously but that there is some
frustration in the delay.

"This is medicine that people need," he said.

Corry argued in court that because the charges against his clients
were dropped that they were en-titled to get back their property,
including the seized marijuana. In an order issued in June, Hiatt said
a hearing on the matter was necessary because the medical marijuana
component of the case was never addressed by the resolution in the
case.

Prosecutors have objected to the property being returned, citing that
neither James nor Lisa Masters were registered medical marijuana
patients at the time of the seizure nor was there any docu-mentation
that they were serving as caregivers for other medical marijuana
patients.

Sheriff calls for halt of revision to medical pot ordinance

Clearly some people don't have a clue what a disabled person LOOKS
like, they come in all shapes and sizes and PAIN does not have a LOOK.
Yet this guy thinks that only old looking people can be sick or in
need of medical marijuana.

<shaking head!>


Sheriff calls for halt of revision to medical pot ordinance
Supervisors urged to consult with law enforcement
By Karen Holzmeister, STAFF WRITER
Article Last Updated: 10/10/2007 06:00:15 AM PDT

OAKLAND — Color him skeptical.

Sheriff Greg Ahern on Tuesday questioned the proposed update of
Alameda County's medical marijuana dispensaries ordinance and what the
regulation is trying to accomplish.

He wants county supervisors to call a temporary halt to a yearlong
ordinance revision and sit down with law enforcement to evaluate what
should be permitted.

"Do the governing officials of Alameda County want to have an
ordinance allowing easy access to marijuana by young adults, or do
they want to work on an ordinance that may provide a small, limited
amount of mariuana to elderly people who are very ill?" he asked.

Ahern clearly believes that young, healthy men are in the driver's
seat when it comes to buying cannabis at three county-permitted
marijuana sales outlets in Cherryland.

"You see a 25-year-old male running up (to the dispensary) and he
doesn't appear to be in any immediate need of medical marijuana,"
Ahern contended.

And, as sheriff's Capt. Dale Amaral noted, deputies eyeballing the
dispensaries don't see older people in wheelchairs, on crutches or
using oxygen tanks entering to buy marijuana.

Ahern's suggestion, which hasn't formally gone to supervisors yet,
surprised Supervisor Nate Miley, the county's point man on
dispensaries.

The three Cherryland marijuana sales businesses are in his
supervisorial district.

"This is news to me," Miley said when told of Ahern's statements. "I
didn't know the sheriff
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didn't support the (revised) ordinance."

Miley noted that he supported, and law enforcement opposed, California
Proposition 215.

The voter-enacted law allows people with a valid doctor's prescription
to possess and cultivate pot for personal use.

While the county needs to eliminate abuse of the state law, "we can't
have such a restrictive ordinance that it won't allow patients to get
medical marijuana," Miley said.

The county issued operating permits to the three dispensaries during
the last two years. During this time, patrons have been the victims of
two homicides along with robberies and burglaries, Ahern said.

Amaral called the Compassionate Collective of Alameda County, on
Mission Boulevard in Cherryland, a "high-volume nuisance."

The proposed amendments to the current medical marijuana law would
allow the dispensaries to carry hashish, a more concentrated and
potent form of cannabis. The clinics also would be outlawed from
carrying food made with marijuana.

Marijuana Party candidate gets three months for trafficking.

Marijuana Party candidate gets three months for trafficking conviction
brings three months in jail
Fourth drug conviction for Marc Boyer, who has terminal illness
Gerry Bellett, Vancouver Sun
Published: Thursday, October 11, 2007

VANCOUVER - Former Marijuana Party candidate Marc Boyer has been
sentenced to three months in jail after pleading guilty in Vancouver
Provincial Court to possession of marijuana for the purpose of
trafficking.

Judge Conni Bagnall ordered Boyer -- who suffers from a terminal
illness -- to be jailed, saying this was his fourth conviction for a
drug offence and the third in the last three years involving
marijuana.

Boyer ran as the Marijuana Party candidate in the Vancouver Quadra
riding in the last federal election.


He was arrested by Vancouver police officers July 13 in Grandview Park
on Commercial Drive.

The officers had gone to the park on another matter but could smell
marijuana and found a small group of people sitting in the park
smoking.

Boyer was seen trying to conceal something and police found 16
marijuana cigarettes under his leg. He was arrested and searched and
just over one pound of marijuana was found on him packaged, as if for
sale, along with $965 in cash.

The court was told that Boyer's cellphone rang and one of the officers
answered the call which was from a person asking for drugs to be
delivered.

Police found pamphlets on Boyer advertising home delivery of marijuana
and giving the number of his cellphone.

Bagnall rejected Boyer's submission that because his birth was never
registered in the usual fashion and he does not have a birth
certificate he does not "hold a person" under the Criminal Code
meaning he has "a void contract with society itself."

"He says that he instead 'holds a person' under the Elections Act. He
argues that this means that although Canadian laws apply to him he can
seek protection from prosecution for his beliefs in the fact of his
membership in the Marijuana Party. "Mr. Boyer's beliefs were the
subject of many of his comments. He believes that according to the
Bible, God gave all 'wind-pollinated herbs' as a gift to mankind. This
category includes marijuana," Bagnall wrote in her reasons for
judgment.

However, the judge, who said Boyer was unrepentant, dismissed all this
and said while he is entitled to hold any view he wishes about the
legality of marijuana, his opinion was irrelevant to the issue of
whether he could be prosecuted.

Bagnall found mitigating factors in sentencing were that Boyer was
terminally ill and used marijuana to ease the symptoms of his disease
and that he sells marijuana "within the loose structure of a
compassion club."

Ed Jagels recommended banning marijuana across the county.

D.A. recommendation: Ban Medical Marijuana
Video High
Proponents of medical marijuana were dealt a major blow Tuesday when
District Attorney Ed Jagels recommended banning it across the county.

State law says it's okay to smoke marijuana if your doctor recommends
it. But federal law says it's illegal no matter what.

It's that conflict that prompted the County Board of Supervisors to
ask Jagels to look into the issue. His report came as a disappointment
to the hundreds, if not thousands, of medical marijuana users in Kern
County.

Jagels recommended repealing the ordinance that gives the sheriff's
department authority to issue licenses to sell medical marijuana.

He also recommended enacting and ordinance that would prohibit any
actions that are illegal under federal law, which would include
smoking marijuana, even for medical reasons.

"The storefront marijuana dispensary that half the state seems to
think is legal in the state is, in fact, illegal," said Jagels.

If passed, Jagels' recommendation would make it impossible for
patients to legally obtain marijuana.

"I'd be reduced to the streets," said Chris Helton, who started using
marijuana 4 years ago to relieve severe headaches caused by a head
injury he suffered working on and oil rig.

"I could try to grow my own, but I haven't been successful. I've been
ripped off."

Story Created: Oct 9, 2007 at 8:11 PM CDT

Story Updated: Oct 9, 2007 at 8:11 PM CDT

Take action to protect Sacramento's medical marijuana patients!

Take action to protect Sacramento's medical marijuana patients!
by Aaron Smith ( safeaccessnow [at] gmail.com )
Tuesday Oct 9th, 2007 12:58 PM

Take action to protect Sacramento medical marijuana patients

Attention Sacramento County Medical Marijuana Patients and Supporters!

Safe Access Now, along with local medical cannabis patients, is
currently lobbying the Sacramento County Board of Supervisors to
implement the statewide medical marijuana ID card program.
Participation in the program would be entirely voluntary for patients
and their caregivers; however, the county is required by law to offer
the cards to qualified residents.

Once the program is in place, patients and their caregivers will be
able to obtain the ID cards through a confidential program
administered by the Department of Health. The program works to protect
cardholders from unnecessary arrest, detainment, or the seizure of
medicine by state and local law enforcement.

In order for us to ensure that this vital program will be made
available to Sacramento County patients, we need your help.

If you are a resident of Sacramento County, please take a few minutes
to e-mail the board of Supervisors urging their support for the local
implementation of the ID card program. If you do not live in
Sacramento County, please forward this alert to any friends, family or
coworkers you might have in Sacramento.

After you have sent your e-mail, please contact Safe Access Now's
Aaron Smith at (866) 204-1341 or safeaccessnow [at] gmail.com to find
out how you can become more involved in our efforts to protect
Sacramento County patients.

With your support, implementation of our state's compassionate medical
marijuana laws will be a reality!

To e-mail the Board of Supervisor's, please visit:
https://ssl.capwiz.com/mpp/issues/alert/?alertid=10405471

Sincerely,
Aaron Smith
Safe Access Now

Outlawing marijuana a waste of time

Outlawing marijuana a waste of time

Oct. 10, 2007 12:00 AM
Regarding "Cartels outrun, outgun the law at Ariz. border" (Republic, Oct. 3):

For decades, we have been naive in our belief that state and federal
drug agents would win a war with prohibitive legislation and threats.
We have successfully filled our prisons while supporting the lucrative
sale of drugs.

Whether an unconscious effort, or a hypocritical self-righteousness
about evil, we are making a lot of people in the United States, Mexico
and Columbia wealthy. We are relinquishing the management of drugs to
the criminal segment of our society.

We have shown that we can reasonably control the consumption of
alcohol and tobacco. Legalize marijuana and eliminate the corrupting
profit.

Retail it and tax it at a price that will discourage smugglers and
back street vendors.

Until we do, we are smug in our self-deception, while in fact
condoning the illegal use of drugs. - Alvin L. Arnold,Wickenburg

http://www.azcentral.com/arizonarepublic/opinions/articles/1010wedlets105.html

Marijuana use condoned in Bible's teachings

Marijuana use condoned in Bible's teachings

Dear Editor, Anastacia Cosner and Kirk Muse ("High school drug policy
needs another look," Sept. 27, and "Marijuana use different than
cocaine or meth," Oct. 5) got arrow-splitting bull's-eyes, but there
is more to the story.

Cannabis (marijuana) prohibition contributes to hard drug addiction
because of inherent lies used to perpetuate the farce. One example:
cannabis is a relatively safe God-given plant, yet the federal
government places it as a Schedule I substance along with heroin, and
meth is only a Schedule II substance.

Although minors should not use cannabis, responsible adults should not
be caged for using it, and one reason is because it is Biblically
correct since Christ God Our Father (The Ecologician) indicates he
created all the seed-bearing plants, saying they're all good, on
literally the very first page. The only Biblical restriction placed on
cannabis is that it is to be accepted with thankfulness (see 1 Timothy
4:1-5).

Stan White

Dillon, Colo.

http://www.tribune-georgian.com/articles/2007/10/10/news/opinion/letters/1letter10.10.txt

Marijuana vs. Aspirin

Marijuana vs. Aspirin
Wed, 10/10/2007 - 19:19 — dreagen

Most people use products that are more damaging to the body with
out any thought to what they are doing to the body just because they
were raised to think it is safe. Although heavy use of marijuana is
not safe it is a lot safer than most of the common used drugs in
today's market. This is article is a comparison of the effects of two
popular pain killers, Marijuana and Aspirin.

Lets start with the history of Marijuana first. Marijuana can be
traced back for thousands of years to almost every culture in the
worlds history. Up until the Marijuana was prohibited by the
Marijuana Tax Act of 1937 the US Pharmacopoeia listed cannabis as the
drug of choice for over 100 different diseases. This reference was
the reference used by doctors since 1820. Cannabis was added to the
US Pharmacopoeia in 1870. Since recorded history Marijuana has never
been found to cause death by overdose.

The History of Aspirin is not so long and distinguished. Aspirin
patented on March 6, 1889 by Bayer who also had the trademark for
Heroin. Aspirin causes an average of 500 deaths per year. This is
from a Medication that is used for pain and heart disease.

Now that we understand the history of the two pain medications
lets look at the legality of both. While Marijuana does have side
effects and is know to assist in over 100 diseases without causing any
deaths it has been prohibited by the US Federal Government since 1937.
Marijuana side effects include problems with memory and learning;
distorted perception (sights, sounds, time, touch); difficulty in
thinking and problem solving; loss of coordination; and increased
heart rate, anxiety, and panic attacks. THESE SIDE EFFECT DO NOT LAST
WHEN AFTER MARIJUANA WEARS OFF. There have been research results that
indicate that Marijuana can cause respiratory irritations among heavy
marijuana users if smoked. This can be easily solved by switching to
vaporized marijuana or taking marijuana orally. Marijuana has not
been linked in any research to lung cancer.

While marijuana is prohibited in the US, with minor side effects
and multiple benefits to the drug, any age child can go to a store and
purchase aspirin over the counter. The effects of aspirin can be very
dangerous. Heartburn; nausea; upset stomach; rash; hives; difficulty
breathing; tightness in the chest; swelling of the mouth, face, lips,
or tongue; black or bloody stools; confusion; diarrhea; dizziness;
drowsiness; hearing loss; ringing in the ears; severe or persistent
stomach pain; unusual bruising; vomiting; Reye syndrome.

In the book, 'The Science of Marijuana' by Dr. Leslie Iversen of
the Oxford University Department of Pharmacology said
"Tetrahydrocannabinol is a very safe drug," she said. "Even such
apparently innocuous medicines as aspirin and related steroidal
anti-inflammatory compounds are not safe." So if safety is your
concern, cannabis is clearly a much better choice than aspirin. If you
eat it or vaporize it, it just might be the safest painkiller the
world has ever known.

Tuesday, October 09, 2007

Marchers press for legal marijuana

JAKE NAUGHTON/Herald photo

— an organization promoting the legalization of medicinal marijuana —
at the Cardinal Bar in downtown Madison. The event had blues-roots
music by The Whiskey River Band and special guests speaking about the
benefit of marijuana for medicinal purposes.

The festivities continued Saturday with speakers and live music from
six Wisconsin bands including Logarythm, Pistols at Dawn with
Harissimo, Elf Lettuce, Tate and the 008 Band, Baghdad Scuba Review,
and Nama Rupa.

Harvest Fest came to a close Sunday with more than 300 people marching
to the Capitol to listen to music and hear more speakers.

NORML was founded in 1970 by Keith Stroup, with the goal of removing
criminal penalties for the adult use of medical and recreational
marijuana. Since then, the group has been lobbying for reform in
marijuana laws across the country.

"The organization feels that marijuana should be legal because it is
unconstitutional to prohibit the use of a natural substance, and the
government should not have the right to tell adults what they should
or should not put in their bodies," Stork said. "Also, it provides a
safer alternative to alcohol and does not encourage violence the way
alcohol does."

While there were many at the festival praising the use of cannabis,
there remains strong opposition to the drug, including from some UW
students.

"If they were to legalize marijuana, I feel that it would open the
door to the legalization of all other drugs, and that would not be
good," UW freshman Amber Rassbach said. "There are enough problems
with drugs now while they are illegal; if they were to legalize them
they would be much more prevalent, and it could lead to more problems
with drugs."

Romney turns back on patient who asks about medical marijuana

David Edwards and Muriel Kane
Published: Monday October 8, 2007



At a campaign stop in Dover, NH, Mitt Romney was asked about medical
marijuana by Clayton Holton, who has muscular dystrophy. "I have the
support of five of my doctors saying I am living proof that medical
marijuana works," Holton told Romney.

Romney suggested he use synthetic marijuana instead, but Holton said,
"I have tried it and it makes me throw up."

He then asked, "Will you arrest me and my doctors if I get medical marijuana?"

"I'm not in favor of medical marijuana being legal," Romney told
Holton curtly, then deliberately turned his back on him to say "Hi,
how are you" to other members of the audience.

Monday, October 08, 2007

POINT OF VIEW-Med marijuana opponent lacks facts

POINT OF VIEW
Med marijuana opponent lacks facts
By Lanny Swerdlow


Marijuana has been used as medicine for over 5,000 years by every
civilization in human history. None has ever crumbled due to its use.
Over the last 70 years, however, it has morphed into a plant so
dangerous that America spends up to $20 billion a year arresting over
825,000 Americans.

According to an Aug. 21 article in the Daily Bulletin, Brenda Chabot,
author of the Sept. 30 Point of View column "Medical marijuana a decoy
in effort to legalize all drugs," is a former probation officer and
her organization, Drug Free Community Coalition, is composed mainly of
members with "backgrounds in law enforcement." They are the real decoy
and are organized to protect law enforcement's access to this
bottomless pit of taxpayer money. Anything that has the scent of
legalization threatens their livelihoods and sends her into paroxysmal
fits of "the sky is falling."

Claiming that "marijuana is a dangerous, addictive drug that poses
significant health threats," Chabot does not cite a single
peer-reviewed study showing any significant detrimental effects for
the vast majority of cannabis consumers. There are no such studies.
After a two-year study, Drug Enforcement Administration Judge Frances
Young ruled that "marijuana in its natural form, is one of the safest
therapeutically active substances known to man ... there is no record
in the extensive medical literature describing a proven, documented
cannabis induced fatality ... by contrast aspirin, a commonly used
over-the-counter medicine, causes hundreds of deaths every year."

Chabot cites a "comprehensive study in 1999" by the Institute of
Medicine, stating that "the study concluded that smoking marijuana is
not recommended for the treatment of any disease condition." But the
executive summary for that study clearly states "there is no clear
alternative for people suffering from chronic conditions that might be
relieved by smoking marijuana, such as pain or AIDS wasting."

Disregarding the vast number of peer-reviewed studies documenting
marijuana's effective symptomatic relief for a large number of
ailments, especially those of senior citizens such as chronic pain,
depression, insomnia, nausea, arthritis and appetite loss, Chabot
ignores the thousands of doctors who recommend medicinal cannabis and
Health Canada, which approved the sale of tincture of cannabis in
2005.

Chabot lauds the pharmaceutical drug Marinol as a substitute for
marijuana even though it less effective and has undesirable side
effects. Marinol is synthetic THC, the major pharmacologically active
ingredient in marijuana. The difference between synthetic THC and
natural THC found in marijuana is that the pharmaceutical companies
can patent synthetic THC and sell Marinol for $10 a pill. They can't
patent marijuana just as they can't patent aspirin and will lose
billions of dollars if medical marijuana becomes available.

Polls conducted by CNN, Time and AARP consistently show over
two-thirds of Americans approving the use of marijuana medicinally.
The public can make intelligent informed decisions, but Chabot blames
the media for the "misperception that marijuana is harmless or may
even have health benefits."

Chabot claims these misperceptions lead teens to "believe that
marijuana can cure cancer." They know something she doesn't. Studies
conducted by Dr. Manuel Guzman at Spain's Compultense University
Department of Biochemistry demonstrate that cannabinoids found in
marijuana "are selective antitumor compounds, as they kill tumor cells
without affecting their non-transformed counterparts."

Research conducted by Dr. Donald Tashkin of the UCLA School of
Medicine found that smoking marijuana does not cause lung cancer and
provided evidence that people who only smoke marijuana are less likely
to develop lung cancer than people who don't smoke anything at all.

Failing to report the threats made by Riverside County District
Attorney Grover Trask and U.S. Attorney Tom O'Brien to arrest elected
officials that allow dispensaries to operate, Chabot's praise that
they are "standing up against the plight of medical-marijuana
dispensaries" rings hollow. Claremont, Diamond Bar and Palm Springs
should be commended for allowing dispensaries to operate and for not
caving in to the bluffs, bullying and blackmail of law enforcement.

Licensed, regulated and taxed medical marijuana dispensaries provide
valuable services. The only research-based report on dispensaries
concluded, "Oakland's permitted dispensaries continue to function
without excessive drain on police resources. Three of the four
dispensaries provide additional social services to their patients and
the surrounding community."

I challenge Ms. Chabot to participate in a public forum bringing her
medical experts to debate our medical experts about the safety and
health benefits of marijuana.

WARNING - Holding your breath waiting for Chabot and the Drug Free
Community Coalition to engage in a public forum could be dangerous for
your health.

Lanny Swerdlow, R.N., is a resident of Palm Springs and director of
the Marijuana Anti-Prohibition Project, an Inland Empire medical
marijuana patient support group. He may be contacted at (760) 799-2055
or at lanny@marijuananews.org.

Marijuana effectivley treats bipolar disorder-Patient account

Marijuana and Bipolar Disorder
by
John Frederick Wilson

from http://www.rxmarihuana.com/bipolar.htm

In bipolar or manic-depressive disorder, the inconsolable misery
of major depression alternates with mania or uncontrolled elation. In
the manic phase people with bipolar disorder are cheerful, gregarious,
talkative, energetic, and hyperactive. Their spending is often
extravagant and their behavior reckless. They may imagine that they
have extraordinary talents and are or soon will be rich and powerful.
This reckless, restless cheerfulness and expansiveness can suddenly
turn into incoherent agitation, irritability, rage, paranoia, or
grandiose delusions.

Antidepressants alone are not a good treatment for bipolar
disorder and may even make it worse. Lithium carbonate, introduced
into medicine at about the same time as tricyclics, has revolutionized
the treatment of bipolar disorder. It prevents mania and to a lesser
extent bipolar depression. Although lithium takes several weeks to
start working, its success rate is about 70 percent and 20 percent of
patients are completely freed of their symptoms. Patients generally
require long-term maintenance treatment, and because lithium can be
toxic it must be used carefully. Chronic use may endanger the heart,
kidneys, and thyroid gland. Usually the dose is gradually increased
until the drug begins to work and then periodically readjusted
according to the patient's age, medical condition, and psychiatric
symptoms. The amount of lithium in the blood must be checked regularly
because it is ineffective if too low and risky if too high. Some side
effects are weight gain, hand tremors, drowsiness, and excessive
thirst or urination. Patients often cannot tolerate lithium either
because of the side effects or because it takes some of the joy from
their lives along with the manic episodes. It has been described as a
"loose-fitting emotional straitjacket." Only 20 percent of patients
with bipolar disorder take lithium alone. Other drugs used in the
treatment of bipolar disorder are the anticonvulsants carbamazepine
(Tegretol) and valproic acid (Depakote), which may be used either
alone or in combination with lithium.

John Frederick Wilson is a forty-two-year-old man who suffers from
rapid cycling bipolar disorder. He has been hospitalized several times
during manic episodes and has been treated with many conventional
medicines:

There is a history of mental illness in my family. My parents and most
of my relatives suffer from various mood disorders, and I myself have
had manic-depressive disorder for more than twenty-five years. My
symptoms are dynamic and occur in clusters of changing intensity.
Sometimes mania dominates, sometimes depression, and I have no way of
knowing which it will be or for how long.

In my manic periods, I feel as though I am flying, gliding
effortlessly through the day with an ever-increasing sense of
wonderment and delight. My body feels charged with energy. I talk
rapidly and forcefully without finishing my sentences, and I
constantly interrupt others. Colors appear brighter. Time seems to go
by twice as fast as usual. I lose my appetite and can't sleep more
than two hours a night. Sometimes I go three days without sleeping,
and when I do sleep, I awaken like a rocket leaving the pad— instantly
alert, feeling as though I have had no rest at all. The situation is
especially unbearable when I am recuperating from fever and physical
illness while unable to sit still or stop talking.

Soon I lose control of my moods and sensations. My skin becomes highly
sensitive to touch, and my clothing is a constant source of
irritation. Taste and smell become so acute that odors I usually enjoy
seem offensive and may trigger a headache. I hear imaginary muffled
voices and tunes. Tears may flow regardless of how I feel. As my
thoughts continue to race, I lose my ability to concentrate and become
extremely anxious—an anxiety that may turn into either elation or
rage. I feel all-powerful at one moment and suicidal the next. I make
plans and promises that I will not even remember at the end of the
day. I spend money on things I do not need and give away substantial
sums to total strangers. I feel compelled to telephone old friends,
running up hundreds of dollars in phone bills. Strangers are often
drawn to me because my contagious enthusiasm, but I may unexpectedly
lose patience with them and verbally assault them. At one moment I may
be speeding through traffic, cutting other drivers off and running red
lights; a few minutes later I feel calm and at a loss to explain my
reckless behavior. At times my libido goes off the scale and I have
intercourse with several women on the same day.

Eventually depression takes over. I become so physically ill that I am
too weak to function. I have no appetite and lose 25 pounds. My skin
is dry; I ache all over. The world seems drab and dull. I want nothing
to do with other people, and I feel as though my presence is a burden
to them. I do not even want to answer the phone or go to the door. I
cannot carry on a conversation, because everything people say to me
seems like a cruel attack. Activities that usually bring pleasure seem
foreign to me. I am overwhelmingly anxious and feel as though I have
never done anything right in my life. I am also extremely indecisive;
a simple task like brushing my teeth takes all morning to plan and
complete. Just when I think the agony cannot possibly get worse, it
does. It seems as though it is never going to end. It is as if there
is no future, no present, and no past—an eternal void. I contemplate
suicide.

My mind and body are ravished by these constant shifts in mood. I have
been treated with individual counseling, group therapy, and
twenty-five prescription drugs. They have all been ineffective. At age
forty I decided that conventional medication was doing more to
compromise my health than restore it. In May of 1995, at the
suggestion of a psychologist who has known me for many years, I
decided to quit my other medications and rely on cannabis to treat my
disorder.

It was not the first time I had tried marihuana. I first used it at
age fifteen, and I was impressed by its effect on my symptoms even
then. As a child and adolescent, I had suffered from constant anxiety,
headaches, nausea, nosebleeds, uncontrollable weeping, and recurrent
nightmares. I was extremely sensitive and easily upset, but I also was
capable of sleeping so deeply that once I did not stir when an Air
Force jet crashed and exploded within a mile of my house. Most of the
time I was shy and withdrawn, with a sense of impending doom, but on
rare occasions I would suddenly feel euphoric and out of control.
Perhaps worst of all were my destructive rages, in which minor
irritation would quickly become uncontrollable and I would destroy my
belongings. These rages were extremely unpleasant, both mentally and
physically, and left me exhausted when they subsided. >From the
beginning, I regarded the supposed euphoria produced by marihuana as
overrated. I was more struck by the improved mood that endured long
after the so-called "high." I soon began seeking a wide variety of
friends, and my life-long sense of anxiety disappeared. I gradually
overcame my shyness and began to develop a better understanding of
people. My tendency to overreact diminished. The bedwetting ceased,
and the headaches became less frequent and intense. My uncontrollable
crying stopped, and my tendency to rage was curbed. I was not the
poster boy for mental health, but I was much more productive than I
had been.

Unfortunately, like most people at the time I allowed the scare
tactics of the day to affect me. I stopped using marihuana at
seventeen, and within weeks I was in a private hospital being treated
for major depression and thinking about suicide. After six weeks of
therapy with little progress, I obtained some marihuana on a home
visit, and immediately thoughts of suicide were replaced with plans
for the future. Several days later I was released and told the doctor
that I had decided to use marihuana to treat my symptoms. He agreed
that it was effective but refused to document the finding. A pattern
emerged in the next twenty-three years as I repeatedly quit using
marihuana and started again. I stopped using it and dropped out of
high school. When I started again, I graduated and received awards. I
stopped using marihuana and dropped out of college, then started again
and earned my degree. When I stopped using marihuana I was fired, and
when I started again I got a new job. Then a random drug screen
detected it, and I was suspended. Since resuming my therapeutic use of
cannabis permanently two years ago, I have no longer had to endure the
disastrous consequences of improper treatment. My manic episodes are
much milder; I am simply energetic, focused, and productive. Even more
remarkably, I have not had any episodes of major depression in the
last two years. It is refreshing to experience normal sadness without
becoming suicidal. Cannabis calms me and focuses my attention. It
makes me more patient with people. I can eat and sleep more regularly.

There is no drug-induced euphoria, and I do not look or act
incapacitated. Family members, friends, neighbors, and health care
professionals often comment on how much I have improved. I still have
some difficulty getting enough sleep, but I do not feel tired all the
time. I am enjoying an emotional stability and productivity I never
knew to be possible before. If I do not use cannabis, all my symptoms
return. My condition becomes unbearable for me and everyone near me.
Many physicians have recommended that I continue to use it.

When I began to use cannabis therapeutically, I smoked two to four
puffs every four to six hours. But I am concerned about the effect on
my lungs, and I do not want to worry about the odor or about finding a
safe place to inhale. Now I smoke rarely—only when I need an immediate
effect because of one of my unpredictable mood changes, or when I have
to stop myself from obsessing about an unpleasant past experience and
concentrate on the present instead.

Most of the time eating cannabis works better for me, and I think it
is healthier. Two to three grams taken in the morning last me all day.
I put the crushed cannabis in an empty frying pan, apply medium heat,
and stir it until a wisp of smoke appears. Then I reduce the heat to
low and add a tablespoon of butter and sometimes a pinch of salt or
sugar. I tilt the frying pan before adding the butter to keep the
mixture concentrated. I sauté the cannabis for eight to ten minutes,
remove it from heat, and immerse the bottom of the pan in an inch of
cold water in my kitchen sink, adding several ice cubes. Five minutes
later I have a cool green paste which I roll into a ball and eat. I
have found that in my therapeutic use of cannabis, potency is not as
important as variety. I would rather have two or more varieties of
moderate potency than one of high potency. The indicas are very
effective in controlling my mania, partly because they have a very
relaxing effect on my body. The sativas also curb my mania, and they
are the most effective medication I have ever used for depression.

Mr. Wilson's mother, Polly Wilmoth, confirms his account:

John has worked hard over the years to survive his life-threatening
disease. I have suffered through it with him, and I have seen the
devastation that conventional medication brings. Year after year we
were told that a safe new drug would soon be out. Year after year we
were told that it was just a matter of adjusting the dose. And year
after year we were told that what works for one patient does not
necessarily work for another. That last statement, at least, could not
be more true as it applies to my son and the use of cannabis. I am
very proud of the progress he has made in the last two years and
believe that he should have legal access to cannabis therapy.