Archive for March, 2008

Morocco no longer top cannabis growers –UN

March 30, 2008

“Morocco has lost its position as the world’s top cannabis grower to Afghanistan”, the head of the UN anti-drugs agency said Thursday.

The Tide Online: • Saturday, Mar 29, 2008

Entirely predictable… no accounting the mess and mayhem [see:farmers in the world’s top hashish producer say they face destitution.] and as assuredly as Morocco’s anti-cannabis policy professes not to, the obscene profits from the Afghan illicit drug crop is funding terrorism.

The policy is the logical equivalent of bombing our own cities!

Blair Anderson
http://mildgreens.blogspot.com

UK govt muddle headed on pot, delusions contagious!

March 29, 2008
UK government to warn about cannabis mental illness danger (predicated on a flawed interpretation, but lets not allow facts to get in the way of a good story/Blair)
 
Posted By StatGuy On 28 March 2008 @ 7:07 pm In Health & Medical, Life issues, UK politics & government, United Kingdom

The British Home Office has unexpectedly reversed itself and [1] agreed to toughen its message regarding cannabis.  The move follows an accumulation of scientific evidence suggesting a causal link between cannabis use and such mental problems as depression, schizophrenia, and suicide.

Youngsters are to be given a stronger warning on the dangers of cannabis following a U-turn in the Home Office.

It is to scrap guidance that cannabis should be avoided by those who already suffer mental health problems.

Instead, young people will be warned that "anyone who uses cannabis could be doing so at a risk to their mental health".

According to [2] recent studies, regular cannabis users are up to six times more likely to develop schizophrenia.  In 2006, almost 23,000 people in Britain [3] received treatment for addiction to cannabis; 9,600 were under 18.

h/t: [4] Christian Institute and [5] Anglican Mainstream

Previous related posts:

Article printed from Magic Statistics: http://magicstatistics.com

URL to article: http://magicstatistics.com/2008/03/28/uk-government-to-warn-about-cannabis-mental-illness-danger/

URLs in this post:
[1] agreed to toughen its message regarding cannabis: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/articles/news/news.html?in_article_id=546829&in_page_id=17
70

[2] recent studies: http://magicstatistics.com/2007/03/24/cannabis-time-bomb-set-to-strike/
[3] received treatment: http://magicstatistics.com/2007/03/18/uk-paper-apologises-for-supporting-cannabis-legalisation/
[4] Christian Institute: http://www.christian.org.uk/issues/2008/drugsdrinking/cannabis_27mar08.htm
[5] Anglican Mainstream: http://www.anglican-mainstream.net/index.php/2008/03/28/youngsters-to-be-warned-of-cannabis-mental-h
ealth-risk/

[6] Cannabis smoke more toxic than tobacco: http://magicstatistics.com/2007/12/19/cannabis-smoke-more-toxic-than-tobacco/
[7] Dramatic increase in mental illness among cannabis users: http://magicstatistics.com/2007/10/22/dramatic-increase-in-mental-illness-among-cannabis-users/
[8] Marijuana triggers schizophrenic and psychotic episodes: http://magicstatistics.com/2007/05/01/marijuana-triggers-schizophrenic-and-psychotic-episodes/

Drug tests make no sense – The Age

March 28, 2008

“Importing a school-based, drug-testing policy that is not backed up by any evidence that it works, and may even be harmful, defies common sense.” – Gino Vumbaca is executive director of the Australian National Council on Drugs.

Drug tests make no sense – Opinion – theage.com.au:

Blair Anderson
http://mildgreens.blogspot.com

To Pot or Not is a choice.

March 27, 2008

To Pot or Not is a choice.

When they banned cannabis it could not have become more prevalent, they may as well have made it compulsory.

The question of ‘to pot or not’ is not about the harm subjective or otherwise from its consumption, rather the net harm that its prohibition has done that is the ‘crime’ rendered on all of us, imbibers or not. Media is complicit in the avoidance of what is at the heart of the matter.

see http://cannabis-hm.net/2008/03/27/should-i-smoke-dope/#comment-239

The entire drug war is predicated on a narc culture that has its roots manifest in pot ‘possession’ prohibition. How bad does it get is the subject of an excellent 104 minute documentary.

Trailer:

Blair Anderson
http://mildgreens.blogspot.com

Drug Classification "Hot Topic"

March 26, 2008

TX goes to the Ashburton Guardian for at least getting the story pretty much straight.

Blair Anderson
http://mildgreens.blogspot.com

Flip-side to ban outlined

March 25, 2008

Flip-side to ban outlined

Drug law crusader Blair Anderson’s approach to lessening the harm of drugs, runs contrary to the mainstream.

Local News – The Timaru Herald – Printable

On Thursday afternoon a brief soap-box sermon in Stafford Street espoused less focus on drug prohibition and more on education and harm minimisation.

Putting benzylpiperazine (BZP) party pills in the same category as marijuana was the way to create a drug problem, he said.

The former Christchurch mayoral candidate is on a soap-box tour of the South Island, but Timaru citizens did not linger to get his message; they went heads-down about their business.

Mr Anderson’s campaign arose after party pill laws were to be in a new Class D, a controlled and legally regulated drug, this option was not taken.

He said this R18 approach was the best way to minimise harm.

Banning BZP would create more problems with fewer safety controls, greater illicit profits, more health issues and markets for dangerous alternatives.

He said cannabis prohibition in a country which smokes as much weed per capita as Jamaica was waste of time and money.

But even the offer of free copies of the latest NORMAL magazine with an article on drug laws was not taken up.

In fact the magazine offer increased pedestrians walking speed.

“BZP was not a good drug, but then nor is alcohol, but until we have the required conversation and civil society addresses itself to this issue we will continue to talk round in circles and fix diddly.”

Mr Anderson, a self-employed computer specialist, has taken it on himself to raise the issue of drug law because the Law Commission is to look at it.

“The first thing to understand is this methamphetamine, alcohol and BZP prevalence in New Zealand is a product of poor drug policy. This is true at both ends of the harms scale and for all points in between. We are, in our legislative response to drugs, our own worst enemy.”

Mr Anderson accepts his views have little public support and politicians see a clear line with drugs and crime as most popular.

When the Misuse of Drugs (Classification of BZP) Amendment Act was passed last week it was supported 109 to 11. However, the Green, Maori and Act parties opposed it.

American Drug War: The Last White Hope (C&I / SKY TV)

March 25, 2008
Managed to catch “American Drug War: The Last White Hope” on SKY. I had just returned from attending the world premier of “Brigadier”, the story behind the honouring of his name in James Hargest High School for which I was attending the fiftieth jubilee. Southland’s Prohibition of alcohol featured in ‘Brigadier’, so to did Invercargill Licencing Trust’s Community ‘post prohibition’ investment in sport and cultural facilities, a prime example of ‘drug related harm reduction’ in action.

The American Drug War is a documentary that deserves to be on mainstream TV. One cannot study modern contemporary politics without seeing understanding policy and drug politics changed human history.

NZ’s Drug War has not been documented, though much can be drawn from New Zealand’s adoption of the UN Conventions and Protocols. Fortunately, NZ doesn’t have a cocaine or heroin problem. The absence of ‘drug trafficking spillage into our markets’ gave us the cannabis methamphetamine enigma we have now. The tougher policy on meth leads to more cannabis detected fools conservatives into thinking ‘problem solved’ when in reality the inverse relationship; tougher on cannabis leads to more meth, is the outcome. (cf: Black Hole Economics, Pokalo and Ice, Professor James Roumasset, Economics Chair, Hawaii University)

The American Drug War features three LEAP speakers, Judge James Gray, DEA agent Cele Castillio, Governor Gary Johnson. Also featured is reform colleague and Biology Chair, Dr Bob Melamede (Colorado).

It is a recommended viewing… 5 stars!

Sunday March 23

The War on Drugs has become the longest and most costly war in American history. Inspired by the death of four family members from legal drugs Texas filmmaker Kevin Booth sets out to discover why the Drug War has become such a big failure. Three and a half years in the making, the documentary follows gang members, former DEA agents, CIA officers, narcotics officers, judges, politicians, prisoners and celebrities. The film centers on Freeway Ricky Ross the man many accuse for starting the Crack epidemic, who after being arrested discovered that his cocaine source had been working for the CIA. The documentary shows how money, power and greed have corrupted not just drug pushers and dope fiends, but an entire government.

Blair Anderson
http://mildgreens.blogspot.com

Review of Misuse of Drugs Act 1975

March 19, 2008

Review of Misuse of Drugs Act 1975

The Commission will review the Misuse of Drugs Act 1975 and make proposals for a new legislative regime consistent with New Zealand’s international obligations concerning illegal and other drugs.

Published 19 Mar 2008

Blair Anderson
http://mildgreens.blogspot.com
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Lawmakers consider marijuana legalization

March 19, 2008

BOSTON — The Legislature’s Joint Committee on the Judiciary, which includes three members of the Lynn delegation, meets today for a hearing on whether to decriminalize marijuana.

(and all this is occuring while the Federal Law Court confronts constitutional issues surrounding gun law… hasnt anyone told them IT’s the drug policy stupid! – see Boston Economics Professor Jeff Miron on Violence Guns and Drugs)

The Legislature is constitutionally required to conduct a hearing on the Committee for Sensible Marijuana Policy (CSMP) initiative that creates a civil penalty and fine system for individuals possessing up to an ounce of marijuana.

The initiative, House bill No. 4468, is titled “An Act Establishing a Sensible Marijuana Policy for the Commonwealth.”

According to Whitney A. Taylor, the CSMP campaign manager, “by creating a civil penalty system for possession of up to an ounce of marijuana, the initiative will greatly reduce the human and financial costs of current laws. Massachusetts’ taxpayers spend $29.5 million a year just to arrest and book these offenders. Even more costly is the creation of a criminal record for the approximately 7,500 offenders arrested every year.

Criminal records are entered into the Criminal Offender Record Information (CORI) database and result in lifelong punishment, potentially making an individual ineligible for student loans, creating barriers to employment, and barring individuals from many housing opportunities, Taylor said.

Sen. Thomas McGee, and Representatives Robert Fennell and Steve Walsh, all Lynn Democrats, are members of the joint committee.

The 1 p.m. hearing at the State House marks the third hurdle in the ballot initiative process: The legislature has until May 6 to pass the initiative and send it to the governor, draft its own version to place on the ballot, or take no action and allow CSMP to continue the initiative process, Taylor said.

The CSMP has lined up several panelists for the hearing to offer support for the initiative. Among them are Sen. Pat Jehlen (D-2nd Middlesex), sponsor of original legislation upon which the CSMP initiative is based; Thomas Kiley of the law firm Cosgrove, Eisenberg & Kiley, former Massachusetts deputy attorney general and the lawyer who drafted the CSMP initiative; Jeffrey Miron, a Harvard University economics professor and author of “The Effect of Marijuana Decriminalization on the Budgets of Massachusetts Governments” and Jack Cole from Law Enforcement Against Prohibition, former undercover narcotics officer and an original signer of the initiative.

Lawmakers consider marijuana legalization / By David Liscio/The Daily Item

Most Scouts favour sex before marriage.

March 17, 2008


“More than 80 per cent of those questioned said they were happy to get drunk and almost half said they would smoke marijuana if offered.”

“The problem is their everyday lives. At school and in their free time, they behave just like their friends, and not just sexually. A significant part has little confidence in politicians, and does not respect the rules of society.” – Nine in 10 Scouts favour sex before marriage – Telegraph

Is it unsurprising then that we live in a collective if deluded perception of drugs, boy racers and sensible sentencing.? / Blair