Tuesday, October 26, 2010

Vanguard University Prop 19 Legalization Panel, October 28, 2010

The History/Political Science Department of Vanguard University is presenting a
panel discussion on Prop 19, the legalizing of marijuana in California, in
Needham Chapel on Thursday, Oct. 28, from 7 to 9 p.m.

Panelists include

  • Judge Jim Gray

  • OtherSide Farms owner Chadd McKeen

  • Retired police captain Dave Brooks

  • Professor Darren Guerra

Vanguard wrote to it's faculty, "We invite you to attend and encourage your
students to attend if this is a topic that you or they find interesting. It
should be an educational evening."

Let's support Vanguard University for being a leader in promoting serious
sociological discussion. We want this to be a very successful event so let's
show them we appreciate their open minds!

If you need any further information please visit www.OtherSideFarms.com or call 949 515 4754

Monday, October 25, 2010

Prop. 19: More Than a Nickel Bag of Opinions

Six leading OC medical-marijuana and pot-legalization advocates leave no turn unstoned in examining the ballot initiative

About the only thing anyone can agree on when it comes to Proposition 19 is that it would allow any California resident 21 years and older to possess up to an ounce of marijuana for recreational purposes. Of course, that’s not all the ballot initiative would do, assuming its myriad other provisions—like the one saying people can only grow 5 square feet of pot plants or the one providing stiff jail terms to people who knowingly sell weed to kids—withstand post-electoral legislative amendments and court challenges. Depending on whom you ask, Prop. 19 would either send a powerful message to both Sacramento and Capitol Hill that the seemingly never-ending war on drugs has been an abject failure, or it would open the floodgates to a massive epidemic of marijuana use, with stoned teenagers dozing off in class and high-as-a-kite motorists creating carnage on freeways from Eureka to San Diego.

Leaving the doomsayers aside, the more interesting and important debate over Prop. 19 pits advocates of marijuana legalization and drug-war reform against folks who have a vested interest in the 1996 Compassionate Use Act (also known as Proposition 215), which famously opened the door to what’s now a burgeoning industry providing medical marijuana to anyone with a valid doctor’s recommendation. With that divide in mind, we talked to a half-dozen local legalization advocates and medical-marijuana experts to find out what they make of Prop. 19 and how they’ll vote come Nov. 2.

Kandice Hawes,
President of OCNORML
Few people are more passionately in favor of Prop. 19 than Hawes. The president of the Orange County chapter of NORML (National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Law) first became an activist when she was arrested in 2003 and charged with felony pot possession during a road trip to Las Vegas. The bust ended the then-Cal State Fullerton student’s government-funded college scholarship. Since then, Hawes has tirelessly worked to end the government’s campaign against marijuana, a crusade she says she’s willing to continue for the rest of her life if necessary.

I think Prop. 19 is the most important issue on this ballot. We haven’t had an initiative like this since 1972—and it was also called Prop. 19, coincidentally. If this doesn’t pass, we won’t have a chance like this for 20 years. We don’t have the fund-raising ability to do it again. We have this chance now. Governor [Arnold] Schwarzenegger recently signed a bill making possession of an ounce just an infraction. He did that so people won’t vote for Prop. 19.

It’s a political move. Even the Democrats are starting to watch this movement and see how it is mobilizing young people to vote, people who are possible Democrats, and they are seeing movement to do this in other states. This will keep people out of jail and save money for our state. And people in the medical-marijuana community are starting to come around and support Prop. 19. They’re worried people won’t want to get recommendations, but people will want to have more than 1 ounce, so the medical-marijuana industry will survive. It’s important for everyone to be open-minded and vote yes on Prop 19.

Chadd McKeen,
Owner of OtherSide Farms
McKeen, who was the subject of a Weekly cover story earlier this year (see Matt Coker’s “Growing Pains,” May 21) is one of the most opinionated voices in the medical-marijuana community. He and his wife, Alysha, both of whom are medical-marijuana patients, intended to open a dispensary in Costa Mesa; the city, however, banned such businesses. They opted instead to open a farm inside a former jewelry store, where they teach other patients how to grow their own medicine rather than pay for it, something that hasn’t exactly pleased folks who own and operate dispensaries or medical-marijuana-delivery services.

At first, I was very much for Prop. 19, and then I found out things about how it was written. There needs to be clarification on how it will affect medical marijuana. Then again, it doesn’t matter what happens in California because it’s still illegal under federal law, and that’s why you can only get a doctor’s recommendation because you can’t prescribe a Schedule 1 drug. If you go on the [Drug Enforcement Administration] website, marijuana is up there with heroin. Schedule 2 is crack cocaine, speed, ice, and I don’t care where you come from, but I think you can all agree crack and speed are not safer than marijuana. Did you know you can write a prescription for crack cocaine? Well, according to the DEA, you can. We need to remove marijuana from Schedule 1. If you can write a prescription, you can go fill it, and then marijuana can be sold legally.

Besides, Governor Schwarzenegger just decriminalized marijuana by making it just a ticket for under an ounce, so what’s the point? [Orange County Superior Court Judge] Jim Gray told me, “Chad, the bottom line is, it’s a step in the right direction; we can make changes later on.” I agree with that, but I am fearful that if it does pass, it will get completely out of control. Everyone will want to buy or grow marijuana. It won’t hurt my business; everyone will be in my class. Kids will be growing it. What works well now is that there is still a taboo on marijuana, so it is kept down low, down in your pocket. Now, people will want to smoke out, like walk out of a bar and smoke half a joint, and then throw it on the ground, and little Bobby or Jimmy will walk up and take it. People will be stealing it, jumping over fences and ripping off plants. I’m not sure which way I’m going to vote. It could come down to the wire.



Saturday, October 2, 2010

A new breed of home marijuana grower

Medical marijuana patients can legally grow their own plants, and many are happy to tend their semi-secret gardens. Businesses such as Otherside Farms and Golden State Greenery help set up grow rooms at residents' homes.

Joanne Clarke, a legal secretary in her late 50s, leads the way down a pale green hallway in her modest Costa Mesa home, past a small guest room on the right and a blue tiled bathroom on the left. At the end of the hall, she opens a door, pushes aside a thick black curtain and ducks inside.

"Isn't this wild?" she says, gesturing to the high-tech marijuana grow room she and her husband recently installed. "This used to be my daughter's bedroom."

Wild is one word for it. Bright is another. Unexpected, yet another. What had been a teenager's tropical-themed room is now a beaming, humming, indoor plant laboratory complete with silver reflective bubble wrap on the walls, blinding grow lights, ventilation ducts hanging from the ceiling and marijuana plants in various stages of development neatly labeled with names such as Platinum Kush, Purple Diesel and Blue Cheese.

"They are like our children," Clarke says, gazing proudly at the elegant fronds that look familiar and exotic all at once. "We talk to them."

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Clarke's grow room is legal — in the state of California, anyone with a doctor's recommendation to use marijuana can grow it in limited quantities — yet it still feels clandestine. Although she's open about using pot (crushed and placed in capsules) to help manage the pain of rheumatoid arthritis, she and her husband haven't shown the room to any friends. "Ninety-five percent of the people I know are fine with it," she says, "but it's that 5% that I worry about. I don't want to make anyone uncomfortable."

Just as California has seen a rise in small-scale backyard vegetable gardeners in recent years, marijuana activists and growers cite a similar, if much quieter, rise in medical marijuana patients growing pot for themselves.

The reasons are varied: Buying medical marijuana at a dispensary can be expensive and uncomfortable for those who don't identify with marijuana culture, and now that the city of Los Angeles has declared that just 41 of the remaining 169 dispensaries are eligible to stay open, finding a convenient place to buy marijuana is becoming increasingly difficult, especially for those with a debilitating illness. The organically minded are concerned about chemicals that might be in marijuana they don't grow themselves, and still others worry about where their pot came from. "I don't want to fund terrorism," one home-grower says.

Some gardeners — and many do see this simply as a form of gardening — say they get the same soothing pleasure from tinkering with grow lights, temperature controls, fertilizers and additives as others get from nurturing prized rose bushes or carefully pruning bonsai trees.

"My husband can spend hours a day in our grow room," Clarke says. "For him, it's fantasy land."

The new breed of home marijuana grower comes in all different forms, whether it's a 25-year-old rooftop gardener taking as much pride in his first harvest of okra as in the marijuana that grows alongside it or a 75-year-old retiree cheerfully growing cannabis on her senior-village balcony. Pony-tailed boomers are geeked out on the fact that it's actually legal to grow this stuff, and at least one new grower called up the UC Cooperative Extension Master Gardener help line for Los Angeles County to ask for advice on growing "grass." (The master gardener on duty misunderstood the question and recommended a drought-tolerant grass. When the caller explained he was talking about grass, she told him she couldn't help: Master Gardener policy.)

Otherside Farms, a marijuana information and education center founded by Chadd McKeen in Orange County, teaches medical marijuana patients how to grow their own pot and also helps people install grow rooms at home. McKeen says half the people who take the weekend-long class on growing marijuana, which he teaches twice a month, are older couples.

"My market isn't the 18- to 25-year-olds — they already know everything," he says. "My demographic is 50- to 60-year-olds."

When he first started installing grow rooms in homes, McKeen was constantly worried that each job was a setup.

"I thought everyone was a cop," he says.

But over time he's become accustomed to the embroidered-sweater-wearing, lighthouse-poster-hanging, older pot smoker who makes up the majority of his clientele. "This is what the marijuana user looks like," he says.

The grow rooms that McKeen installs are generally replicas of the rooms he has in his storefront headquarters in Costa Mesa, even down to the bright orange Home Depot utility buckets he puts mature plants in. Most of the rooms he installs are in second bedrooms, which he usually divides in half to create two different environments — a "veg room" where the plants grow and a "bloom room" where a change in lighting and temperature encourages budding. He said the rooms generally cost about $15,000 to set up.

Golden State Greenery, another company in Orange County that helps novices build grow rooms at home, offers the "California 5-by-5 special," a 5-by-5-foot grow tent that can be set up in a living room or garage. The tent is black on the outside to keep light and heat from escaping, and to keep the structure as discreet as possible. But inside, it's lined in reflective silver to maximize the light source. For $2,500, the company says it can have new clients ready to grow their own cannabis within four hours.

All this fancy (and expensive) growing equipment isn't technically necessary. It is possible to grow marijuana outdoors in Southern California. If planted in the spring, a seed or clone will generally produce one harvest in early fall. Many people have had success with simply sticking a plant on a balcony or tucking one among the tomatoes in the backyard.

"Pot is actually easier to grow than tomatoes," said one man in San Diego, who like many people contacted for this article has a doctor's recommendation and is growing legally but still asked to remain anonymous. "There's a reason they call it 'weed.'"

But for many home growers, the best place is inside. An indoor growing system offers environmental controls that would be impossible to get outside — no snails or caterpillars, less chance of powdery mildew. It also offers the possibility of four harvests a year rather than one. Another reason: Marijuana plants, even just a few, are still magnets for trouble even though medicinal pot has been legal since 1996.

"We tell our students it's kind of like before: You don't plant it in your front yard or your front porch, and you don't show it off," says Jeff Jones, a prominent marijuana activist who teaches grow classes in Oakland and Los Angeles. "There is still the home invasion issue, and your neighbor to the left or to the right might want to steal it from someone who has a VIP pass to grow something that is not legal for others."

At a recent "traveling party," when neighbors went around to one another's homes to check out new additions or garden makeovers, a friend asked Clarke if she and her husband would be showing off their new grow room. Clarke declined.

"It's still hard for people to understand this is legal," she says. "So now when people ask about our new hobby, we just laugh and say my husband is growing a few plants for me. People know we're doing it. They just don't know the full extent."

Source:
LA Times: A new breed of home marijuana grower

Wednesday, May 26, 2010

Medical Marijuana Advocate Chadd McKeen Seeks to Shake Up Costa Mesa City Council

Read this story here: Click Here

Please also review comments below (pulled from this article) and share your thoughts.

Chadd McKeen says:

It seems we are being followed by the police. They have the Information Center and our home staked out. It's unfortunate that the plethora of information regarding the truth about marijuana is completely ignored by those in power. Who are we to think we know better than the top minds in the WORLD? I have studies from Harvard, UCLA and many more PROVING that marijuana is valuable medicine for so many ailments. I fear my freedom is in jeopardy and it's a shame the city is focusing it's efforts on coming after me. Thank you all for the amazing support. Please keep up the fight so our brothers and sisters in pain can find some comfort.

Posted On: Tuesday, May. 25 2010 @ 9:50AM
Robert says:

Chadd
The Directors of the Collectives support you and your Family. Be assured we have your back and encourage you to join us. We are all heading in the same direction and are much stronger together than alone. Their is strength in numbers and everyday more and more are joining us to battle this horrible prohibition on Medical Cannabis.
God Bless You and Yours
Newport Mesa Patients Association

Posted On: Tuesday, May. 25 2010 @ 11:57AM
Matt Coker says:

Robert-

Well said. Those who gave Chadd and Otherside Farms grief this past weekend over our cover story have lost sight of two things:

1) Chadd wants safe and effective medication for patients. Who can be against that?

2) City leaders and cops who are apparently following him can be against that, proving who the real villains are in Chadd's story.

Posted On: Tuesday, May. 25 2010 @ 4:50PM

Thursday, May 20, 2010

OTHERSIDE FARMS in OC Weekly

OTHERSIDE FARMS makes front cover of OC Weekly this week, May 20, 2010. Get your copy today!

Please note that there are some twisted statements made in this article and OTHERSIDE FARMS does not openly bash dispensaries. Our intentions are good willed and we do not slam anyone. We only wish for a solution that works for EVERYONE. If there are any questions which require clarification, please contact us.

"Here is my take on all of this. There are no dispensaries named in my statements nor did I say ALL or EVERY dispensary and the truth of the matter is that there are bad elements to EVERY industry and if we expect those who oppose medical marijuana to take us serious we ought come to some realizations about the truth. I spoke with several dispensary owners regarding the article and they took no offense to the story stating "I didn't feel it related to me". Exactly! The opposition to medical marijuana has some legitimate concerns about our industry and if we act like everything is just fine then how can expect them to think we are rational and logical thinkers. It's funny to me that so many are offended feeling I put their name or business out there when that didn't happpen at all. Then, those same people do the exact same thing to me and my family. Do we really expect the cities to want to talk to us? It seems we're either suing them or fighting amongst each other. It's unfortunate this has taken the direction it has. It's also odd that the "Chadd McKeen openly bashes dispensaries" statement is only in the online version and again, I never stated any names of dispensaries nor did I say ALL or EVERY dispensary. Also, I dont see where I said "my way is the only way" or that "I am the only one doing it right". This article, and it's subsequent comments, have had a horrible effect on myself and family due to the local dispensaries feeliing we have betrayed them and that was not our intent at all. If our intent were malicious or if we had stated something that was incorrect we would apologize, but we haven't "openly bashed" anyone or mistated the truth. We thank those of you who are supporting us and we encourage those of you who have questions about any of this to come and talk to us in person."

- Chadd McKeen

Wednesday, May 19, 2010

Drug-Friendly Netherlands to Close 8 Prisons -- Not Enough Crime

For years prohibitionists, including our own Drug Enforcement Administration, have claimed — falsely — that the tolerant marijuana policies of the Netherlands have made that nation a nest of crime and drug abuse. They may have trouble wrapping their little brains around this:

The Dutch government is getting ready to close eight prisons because they don’t have enough criminals to fill them. Officials attribute the shortage of prisoners to a declining crime rate.

Just for fun, let’s compare the Netherlands to California. With a population of 16.6 million, the Dutch prison population is about 12,000. With its population of 36.7 million, California should have a bit more than double the Dutch prison population. California’s actual prison population is 171,000.

News by Marijuana Policy Project
(May 26, 2009) in Society / Drug Law
By Bruce Mirken

Saturday, May 15, 2010

Governor Schwarzenegger on Marijuana: It's Not a Drug, It's a Leaf!

Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger made newsthis week when the Associated Press reported an interview Schwarzenegger did with the British edition of GQ where he said marijuana is not a drug, it's a leaf. The Governor's press secretary quickly tried to do damage control and claim that he was joking and made the comments in a lighthearted context. This is not the first time that the Governator has had to address marijuana. There is the famous scene in the documentary Pumping Iron where he smokes a joint on screen.

America (and Arnold) has a paradoxical relationship with marijuana. Tens millions of Americans have smoked or continue to smoke marijuana. Arnold's reefer smoking in Pumping Iron not only didn't hurt him when running for Governor, it probably helped him. And Schwarzenegger is far from being in the minority of elected officials who have smoked marijuana. Many successful politicians have admitted to smoking marijuana, including Al Gore, Barack Obama, New York mayor Michael Bloomberg and Newt Gingrich to name just a few.

Marijuana smoking is often portrayed throughout pop-culture, like movies and music, in a positive light. Marijuana use does not usually preclude someone from running for office. There are millions who think that heroin and cocaine are real drugs, but marijuana is just a leaf. However, the war on marijuana is very real. According to FBI statistics, about 800,000 of the roughly 1.8 million annual drug arrests are for marijuana -- 88 percent for possession alone. While getting busted smoking a joint may not land you in jail for a serious amount of time, the collateral consequences are very serious. A drug offense, including marijuana possession, will make you ineligible for finical aid for school. Smoking marijuana can also keep you from dozens of others professions that drug test their employees.

I appreciate the Governor's candor and even humor when talking about marijuana. But if he wants to live up to his image of an action hero who has the courage to take on the hard issues, he could start by going after the irrational and inhumane war on marijuana, which he knows is a joke.

Source: Huffington Post

Tuesday, May 11, 2010

Medical Marijuana and Autism

Medical Marijuana for Autism - 20/20 special in the month of June.

Please write a comment for Joey's mom, leading advocacy for Medical Marijuana treat her son's autism.
http://uf4a.com

The Unconventional Foundation for Autism is quickly becoming a leading advocate in the fight for nationwide investigation, research and analysis of the legalization of Medical Marijuana;in accordance with similar terms & conditions set forth by The California Compassionate Use Act.

Wednesday, May 5, 2010

Medical Marijuana School - Sing Tao Daily

OTHERSIDE FARMS Medical Marijuana Information Center in Sing Tao Daily Newspaper


有关大麻合法化进入公投议题传得沸沸扬扬的同时,一间让人耳目一新的「大麻学校」日前在橙县(Orange County)柯斯塔梅莎市(Costa Mesa)开放,经营者麦肯(McKeen)夫妇公开授课,从种植、法律、医学和烹饪的角度,让人们和大麻「亲密接触」,并将大麻背后鲜为人知的事公诸于 世。

  这座名叫「另一边农场」(Otherside Farms)的大麻学校(资讯中心)坐落在新港滩大道(Newport Beach Blvd.)上一个小型商业广场内,男主人麦肯解释说,「另一边」得名于「另一边的草总是更绿些」这句谚语,英文中的「草」(grass)也可以指代大 麻。 Read Full Article...



The legalization of marijuana into the issue of the referendum, while mass was uproar, an amazing "marijuana school" recently in Orange County (Orange County) Costa Mesa city (Costa Mesa) open, the operator McCann (McKeen) couple public lectures, from cultivation, legal, medical, and culinary point of view so that people and marijuana "high touch" and cannabis behind the little-known things made public. Read Full Article...

Modern Medicine is now the third leading cause of death in America!

Most of us don’t know how many people are actually dying at the hand of the very system that is supposed to save us. What is even more astonishing is that the information about these travesties is completely hidden and not talked about.

Highlighted in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA), and reverberated in the upcoming documentary film Food Matters, is one of the best articles documenting the tragedy of the conventional medical paradigm.

The author is Dr. Barbara Starfield of the Johns Hopkins School of Hygiene and Public Health and she describes how the US health care system may be contributing to our poor health.

These are deaths per year:

- 12,000 — unnecessary surgery
- 7,000 — medication errors in hospitals
- 20,000 — other errors in hospitals
- 80,000 — infections in hospitals
- 106,000 — non-error, negative effects of drugs

These total to 225,000 deaths per year from modern medicine!

Add to this the number of deaths from Heart Disease and Cancer each year and the truth is out.

- 652,486 Heart disease
- 553,888 Cancer
- 225,000 Modern Medicine

Modern Medicine is now the third leading cause of death in America!

What we are experiencing now is a crisis of health care and looking to the economics of the industry is not going to solve a thing. The fact of the matter is that we need a whole new paradigm, we need to be looking at all the ways we can boost health through nutritional therapy and other alternatives approaches which are less toxic, less invasive, more effective, more safer and significantly cheaper. The 30 or 40 million people who are without health care insurance in America right now is getting some attention, as it rightly should. However is the answer giving them access to a system that doesn’t really work. Or do they need education rather than medication?

Every person reading this right now realizes that at some level they wish to help their families lives, their children’s lives and the life of the planet. And if this is our decision we need to be looking at our food choices very closely and this is exactly what the new film Food Matters delves into. If you’re after an answer to a significant health challenge or wish to protect yourself and your family from becoming customers of the ‘sickness industry’ then check out the trailer to the upcoming documentary film Food Matters.

Sources:

Death Statistics: http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/fastats/lcod.htm
Modern Medicine Statistics: Journal American Medical Association July 26, 2000;284(4):483-5

Reposted from Food Matters Blog

Tuesday, April 13, 2010

Marijuana ballot item worries CM officials

Costa Mesa officials say they haven’t looked into how a statewide November ballot initiative that would legalize the recreational use of marijuana would affect the city’s ban on medical marijuana dispensaries.

But one thing is certain: At least two council members say they have deep concerns about changing state law.

“To me, when you think about it, how is that going to be implemented? I can’t even comprehend it,” said Councilwoman Katrina Foley. “I have great concerns.”


Earlier this week, enough signatures were gathered to place an initiative on the ballot. The measure would call for legalizing recreational use of the drug for users 21 years or older, allowing them to possess up to an ounce of pot. The measure would also allow Californians to plant marijuana gardens of up to 25 square feet.

It would ban marijuana use in public, around children or on school grounds. It would also give local governments the chance to permit and tax pot sales, but details of levies and distribution haven’t been ironed out.

Costa Mesa City Attorney Kimberly Hall Barlow said she hasn’t analyzed how the initiative would affect the city’s marijuana ordinance.

“It is my understanding that it does not relate to storefront businesses, but possession of an ounce or less, so I can’t tell you that it’ll have any impact on Costa Mesa’s ordinance,” she said.

Costa Mesa police lately have been enforcing the city’s 2005 ban on medical pot sales on the seven to nine dispensaries that have opened in the last six months. Some owners have been arrested while others have received ease-and-desist orders.

Although Foley voted against the ordinance, she said her concerns were for those who used marijuana as a medicine to ease the symptoms of serious illnesses.

“My view on it is a 2010 view, and I personally don’t think how people selling, distributing, dispensing this right now is appropriate and in some cases, you’re right next to residential neighborhoods,” She said.

Mayor Allan Mansoor said that if the ballot initiative passes the city will deal with its impact then.

“I believe that the only real solution is going to be on a regional or statewide basis,” he said. “I have concerns about it being used on abusive basis, and that is a legitimate concern based on what I’ve seen from my law enforcement experience.”

Chadd McKeen, co-owner of Otherside Farms, a medical marijuana information center that recently opened in Costa Mesa, has his own worries.

“We’re going from a situation where it’s completely unregulated and illegal to a situation where it’s completely unregulated and legal, and that’s a big jump,” McKeen said. “I do think that’s going from one end of the spectrum to the other, and I don’t know how they’re going to make money. How can you tax something when somebody is growing it at home? It’s going to be out of control.”

McKeen, whose business provides those with prescriptions for medical marijuana lessons on how to grow it, said pot should be regulated and taxed but not legalized across the board.

“I do have concerns about children and how accessible it’s going to be,” said McKeen, adding he doesn’t believe the initiative will pass. “I think it should be a medical use thing.”

Friday, April 9, 2010

Slowly, states are lessening limits on marijuana

LOS ANGELES — James Gray once saw himself as a drug warrior, a former federal prosecutor and county judge who sent people to prison for dealing pot and other drug offenses. Gradually, though, he became convinced that the ban on marijuana was making it more accessible to young people, not less.
"I ask kids all the time, and they'll tell you it is easier to get marijuana than a six-pack of beer because that is controlled by the government," he said, noting that drug dealers don't ask for IDs or honor minimum age requirements.

So Gray — who spent two decades as a superior court judge in Orange County, Calif., and once ran for Congress as a Republican— switched sides in the war on drugs, becoming an advocate for legalizing marijuana.

"Let's face reality," he says. "Taxing and regulating marijuana will make it less available to children than it is today."
Gray is part of a growing national movement to rethink pot laws. From California, where lawmakers may outright legalize marijuana, to New Jersey, which implemented a medical use law Jan. 19, states are taking unprecedented steps to loosen marijuana restrictions. Advocates of legalizing marijuana say generational, political and cultural shifts have taken the USA to a unique moment in its history of drug prohibition that could topple 40 years of tough restrictions on both medicinal and recreational marijuana use.

A Gallup Poll last October found 44% favor making marijuana legal, an eight-point jump since the question was asked in 2005. An ABC News-Washington Post poll in January found 81% favor making marijuana legal for medical use.

Attorney General Eric Holder last fall announced that raiding medical marijuana facilities would be the lowest priority for U.S. law enforcement agents — a major shift that is spurring many states to re-examine their policies. The American Medical Association recommended in November that Congress reclassify marijuana as a drug with possible medicinal benefit.
At least 14 states this year — some deeply conservative and Republican-leaning, such as Kansas — will consider legalizing pot for medical purposes or lessening the penalties for possessing small amounts for personal use. Fourteen other states and the District of Columbia already have liberalized their marijuana laws.

"We are absolutely in an important new era in which increasing majorities of Americans are not just questioning the wisdom and efficacy of marijuana prohibition but are demanding alternatives," says Stephen Gutwillig, California director for the Drug Policy Alliance, which favors legalizing marijuana.

Kurt Gardinier, spokesman for the Marijuana Policy Project, which promotes marijuana for medical use, calls Holder's shift "one of the most significant changes in federal drug policy in the last 30 years. It puts states at ease that they won't be in conflict with the federal government."

The Obama administration still opposes smoking marijuana for its medicinal benefit, says Tom McLellan, deputy director of the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy. He says more research is needed to deliver the medically useful ingredients in a non-smokable form.

"We have the safest medications in the world and it's not a coincidence. We have an enviable process by which we approve medications, and that's through the (Food and Drug Administration)," he says. "It's a bad idea to approve medication by popular vote."

Yet even a few prominent opponents admit it's getting harder for them to persuade lawmakers to continue tough restrictions on marijuana, though they vow to continue fighting against legalization and warn of dire long-term consequences.

"The momentum is not with us, and we understand that," says Michael Carroll, president of the International Association of Chiefs of Police and the police chief of West Goshen Township in Chester County, Pa.

The 20,000-member police chiefs association opposes legalizing medical marijuana and decreasing penalties for possession because it fears abusers will cause drugged-driving accidents and other societal and health problems that come with drug abuse. The National Institute on Drug Abuse says marijuana can cause heart irregularities, lung problems and addiction.

"We're going to multiply the problems we have with alcohol abuse," Carroll says. "Things are not going our way, but that's not stopping us for speaking out about it."

Among the states considering marijuana bills this year:

• Alabama, Delaware, New York, North Carolina and Pennsylvania, are debating allowing medicinal use of marijuana for people with certain illnesses;

• Hawaii and Rhode Island, are considering bills to reduce the penalties for marijuana possession to fines rather than jail time;

• Vermont is weighing whether to allow state-licensed liquor stores to sell medical marijuana.

California leads the way

California became the first state to allow marijuana for medical use when voters approved a statewide ballot issue in 1996, and its provisions are so broad that tens of thousands of people have obtained a doctor's recommendation to use marijuana for ailments from cancer to arthritis.

Now California's Legislature is considering a bill that would make it the first state to legalize marijuana for recreational use as well. It is unlikely to pass this year, but Gray and other advocates hope to have a proposition on the November ballot that would legalize marijuana use for anyone 21 or older. California would levy taxes that the state tax board says could raise $1.3 billion or more a year for the deficit-plagued state, while saving tens of millions in prison and law-enforcement costs. Sponsors of the ballot issue have turned in 690,161 signatures on petitions for verification, far more than the 433,971 valid signatures required to get on the ballot.

A 2009 statewide Field Poll found 56% support pot making pot legal for recreational use and taxing it.

The economics argument may be the clincher, proponents hope. They call the proposition a matter of "tax and regulate" rather than "legalize," saying state control will take marijuana out of criminals' hands while generating badly needed revenue.

"It's history repeating itself, with (the) alcohol prohibition repeal during the Great Depression," says Richard Lee, an Oakland marijuana entrepreneur and president of Oaksterdam University, which trains people to work in the medical marijuana industry. Lee, who is pushing the ballot issue, says, "Now we have the Great Recession. That will be on people's minds."

Yet as changing attitudes and economic forces propel the legal pot movement in California, some wrinkles have emerged as the medical marijuana industry expands. After some complaints from neighbors, municipalities and prosecutors are moving to regulate the industry more closely to limit the growth of pot dispensaries and prevent sales for recreational use.

Prosecutors in Los Angeles and San Diego contend that while the law allows marijuana for medical uses, it does not specifically permit the sale of marijuana. They have launched a series of raids aimed at closing some of the hundreds of medical marijuana dispensaries now operating out of storefronts.

"I call it the slippery slope," says Dennis Zine, an Los Angeles city councilman. "Now we have it for medical purposes. Now let's expand it to anyone who wants to get high? I don't support that. ... Do we then legalize cocaine, legalize heroin?"

Tehama County, Calif., Sheriff Clay Parker said the state's current medical marijuana law is filled with gray areas that make enforcement uneven and difficult. He says he opposes further relaxation of state laws but would welcome a federal change that would drop marijuana's status as a Schedule 1 controlled substance, the most tightly restricted, to a lower level that would place marijuana in a category with prescription drugs that pharmacies could dispense.

Gray, who retired as a judge in 2009, says many judges agree with him that sending marijuana users to jail places a costly burden on the state and clogs the justice system, ultimately taking police and court resources from pursuing violent criminals. Most judges, he says, fear saying so.

"Probably half of my colleagues talk privately the same way I do, but publicly they're concerned about standing out," he says.

Jeff Studdard, 46, is another one-time drug warrior who has changed his thinking. A former school police officer and Los Angeles County sheriff's deputy, Studdard tried marijuana to ease pain and restore his appetite after a broken back forced him out of law enforcement. "I have stopped all my (other) pain meds now and I've gained weight. It's almost like a wonder drug," he says.

Assemblyman Tom Ammiano, a Democrat from San Francisco who introduced the tax and regulate bill, predicts California eventually will legalize marijuana and other states will follow.

"It's inevitable that there will be some kind of legalization of recreational marijuana," Ammiano says. "How and where it's going to happen I think is an open question, but I think a lot sooner than later."

Support not politically risky

Despite growing popular acceptance of marijuana, battles are still fought in state legislatures when such bills are introduced, and many of the bills still fail. Yet advocates say politicians are more willing to take on what only a few years ago was a politically risky cause.

"Politicians are finally catching up with the American public," Gardinier says.

Most of the changes have come on the West Coast and Northeast, but lawmakers in a few Southern and Central states also are proposing bills, in part because they see marijuana as a potential money-maker, says Gutwillig of the Drug Policy Alliance.

Rhode Island is among the states considering legislation that would regulate and tax marijuana or reduce penalties for personal use to a misdemeanor and fine.

Rhode Island's Legislature adopted medical marijuana last year, setting up dispensaries and a registration system. A decriminalization bill introduced in the 75-member House has 35 co-signers, including three of the six Republican lawmakers.

Sen. Joshua Miller, a Democrat from Cranston, R.I., leads a Senate commission that is studying whether to drop tough penalties for marijuana use. He says statewide polls show 80% of Rhode Islanders favor decriminalization. Rhode Island borders Massachusetts, which decriminalized marijuana last year. The debate, he says, has been framed by the state's poor financial condition.

"We'd rather spend our resources on violent crime," he says. "I'd also argue that the best way to get to people who abuse drugs is treatment over incarceration."

That argument is being reinforced at the federal level by President Obama's drug czar Gil Kerlikowske, a former Seattle police chief who favors a treatment-driven approach to drug abuse.

Even in conservative Kansas, where the Legislature recently voted to outlaw a synthetic drug that mimics marijuana, backers of looser marijuana laws say they have hope.

Rep. Gail Finney, a first-term Democrat, has proposed legalizing marijuana for use by the critically ill. The bill is unlikely to pass this year, Finney says, but she wants to use the hearings to educate fellow lawmakers and plans to reintroduce it until it passes.

"It's time for Kansas to have an open, honest debate about this," she says.

She thinks many of her House colleagues would support the bill if they didn't fear backlash in an election year — a fear she says is unfounded. A Feb. 2 poll of 500 Kansans by KWCH-TV in Wichita found 58% supported medical marijuana.

"If they were in touch and in tune with their constituents," Finney says, "they would know that this is what they want."

Source: USA Today By William M. Welchand Donna Leinwand

Thursday, April 8, 2010

Marijuana School Opened by Newport Beach couple

A Newport Beach couple have opened what they describe as a marijuana school, and city officials say it's legal as long as they don't distribute pot there.

Chadd and Alysha McKeen don’t care that passersby can see the six 3-foot-tall marijuana plants growing inside their new storefront.
“I want to tell people to stop being afraid of it,” Chadd McKeen, co-founder of Otherside Farms, told the Daily Pilot. “We want to bring it out into the open.”

The McKeens also put in new tile and ripped the bars off the windows at the center, which sits between a dog-grooming business and a therapeutic spa. It’s all part of an effort to make the place appear open and inviting.

The shop at 2424 Newport Blvd. in Costa Mesa bills itself as a “medical marijuana information center.” It offers classes on everything from how to grow marijuana for medicinal purposes to how to make pot brownies. The six plants growing underneath special lights in one foil-padded room of the shop are strictly for teaching purposes, the couple said.

Source: LA Times Blog and Daily Pilot

New Jersey Legislature approves bill to make state 14th with medical marijuana

The New Jersey legislature voted Monday to make that state the 14th in the country to approve marijuana for medicinal use, pending the governor's signature.

Gov. Jon Corzine, who leaves office next week, has said he would sign the bill.

Two years after the bill was introduced to the legislature, the New Jersey Compassionate Medical Marijuana Act was passed by the state Assembly in a 48-14 vote. It received Senate approval just hours later in a 25-13 vote.

According to the news release from the state Senate, the bill would allow doctors to give to patients with state-issued identification cards prescriptions to buy marijuana legally from registered alternative treatment centers. The identification cards would be issued by the Department of Health and Senior Services

Only patients with proven "debilitating conditions" would qualify for ID card. Such conditions include "cancer, glaucoma, positive HIV/AIDS status or other chronic, debilitating diseases or medical conditions that produce, or the treatment of which produces, wasting syndrome, severe or chronic pain, severe nausea, seizures, or severe and persistent muscle spasms," according to the Senate news release.

"Out of the 14 states that have similar bills, New Jersey's will be the strictest," Assemblyman Reed Gusciora, one of the bill's sponsors, told CNN. "I believe that this bill will be model legislation for states here on out that will look to (be) legalizing marijuana. We looked at the pitfalls of California and made a more restrictive bill."

Sen. Nicolas Scutari, the bill's Senate co-sponsor, also attributed the bill's success to its restrictive measures, saying, "We put a whole lot of safeguards to make sure that what had happened in other states with respect to abuses ... would not happen here, and I think everyone was satisfied as a result, so it passed pretty easily."

Gusciora pointed to the omission of stress and anxiety as one of the qualifying conditions for a prescription, to further emphasize the bills distinction from other states' bills, saying "I feel like every college student would qualify for stress and anxiety, and has qualified in California."

Marijuana use would be restricted to private property under the measure. Patients with legal prescriptions could still be arrested for using marijuana in public, and they could still face driving under the influence charges if they used marijuana and got behind the wheel, according to Gusciora.

The bill has been passed in time for Corzine to sign it before Gov.-elect Chris Christie takes over on January 19. According to Scutari, although Christie has shown a "willingness to sign" the bill, the timing of the bill's passage is ideal.

"I didn't want to start from scratch," says Scutari, "I've been working on this for five years, and we wanted to ensure while we had control of the bill that we could get it passed in a form that was acceptable to all sides.

According to Gusciora, the bill will still take six to nine months to take effect. Various safeguards such as Department of Health approval of dispensaries and tracking of patients by the Division of Consumer Affairs need to take place before doctors and patients can legally buy medical marijuana in New Jersey.

For most of the New Jersey state lawmakers, however, this is huge victory. "My mother has multiple sclerosis and I could tell you that anything that could alleviate her symptoms, I would certainly want to be able to offer," said Scutari.

Source: CNN

Judge orders CHP to return 60 pounds of marijuana

It had been confiscated from a motorist whose attorney convinced a judge that California's medical marijuana law allowed its transport.

With the debate on medical marijuana still at a full boil in Los Angeles, a judge Friday ordered the return of 60 pounds of pot to a man after his attorneys successfully argued that a state law gave him the right to transport it.

Saguro Doven, 33, was initially charged with possession of marijuana for sale and transportation of the drug, a violation of the state's health and safety code.

The marijuana was bundled in individual bags that were tucked inside a larger duffel bag when Doven was pulled over on the 101 Freeway by a California Highway Patrol officer, according to court records.

But defense attorney Glen T. Jonas argued that his client was a member of a Venice-based medical marijuana collective and that he was authorized to transport the marijuana. The California attorney general's guidelines regarding medical marijuana indicate that collectives are allowed to both grow and transport quantities of marijuana for its members.

Jonas said the prosecution's expert witness, CHP Sgt. Richard Fuentes, was unqualified to render an expert opinion in the case because he lacked the knowledge required to distinguish lawful from unlawful possession and transportation of marijuana, according to court records.

Fuentes had testified that only caregivers can transport or carry large quantities of marijuana. The law, however, states that members of a collective may transport marijuana on behalf of the group and are exempt from prosecution.

Los Angeles County Superior Court Judge William Sterling agreed that the prosecution expert was unqualified and ordered the charge of possession for sale dismissed.

On Monday, the Los Angeles County district attorney's office asked that the remaining transportation count be dismissed.

Doven's attorney then asked for the 60 pounds of marijuana to be returned -- a request that was granted. Doven could have faced a maximum of four years in state prison if found guilty.

"Although justice was delayed, I am thankful it wasn't denied," Doven said.

Source:
Judge orders CHP to return 60 pounds of marijuana (January 09, 2010 by Gerrick Kennedy)

Friday, March 26, 2010

Legalize Marijuana on Califonia's November Ballot!

The California Secretary officially certified the Regulate, Control, and Tax Cannabis Act of 2010 for the state’s November ballot. This means that on November 2, Californians will be able to vote to send marijuana prohibition to the ash heap of history!

The groundbreaking initiative would make personal possession and cultivation of marijuana legal for adults over 21 in California. It would also allow cash-strapped cities and counties to tax and regulate marijuana sales in order to reap millions in new tax revenues. The proposition will also call on the legislature to enact a statewide system to tax and regulate marijuana.

Will the nation’s largest state finally create a legal market – complete with tens of thousands of new jobs – for what’s already its top cash crop?

From MPP Blog

Tuesday, March 16, 2010

Q & A

Q: What is the difference between Indica and Sativa?
A: Scientifically (and legally), all cannabis plants are Cannabis Sativa.

In practice, indica and sativa are the names used to distinguish each end of the cannabis 'spectrum'. There are a multitude of different growth-patterns, qualities and effects within this spectrum, most of which are a result of cannabis' remarkable ability to adapt to its environment. Genetically, and in terms of interbreeding, all cannabis is in the same family.

Q: What is the sativa cannabis high?
A: The sativa high is often characterized as uplifting and energetic. The effects of a sativa marijuana are mostly cerebral. They give a feeling of optimism and well - being, as well as providing a good measure of pain relief for certain symptoms. A few pure sativas are also very high in THC content. They are known to have a quite spacey, or hallucinogenic, effect. Sativas are a good choice for daytime smoking.

Q: What is the indica cannabis high?
A; The indica highs are most often described as a pleasant body buzz. indicas are great for relaxation, stress relief, and for an overall sense of calm and serenity. Marijuana indicas are also very effective for overall body pain relief, and often used in the treatment of insomnia. They are the late - evening choice of many smokers as an all - night sleep aid. A few pure indica strains are very potent in THC, and will cause the "couch lock" effect, enabling the smoker to simply sit still and enjoy the experience of the smoke.

Ways to Medicate

Vaporization is an alternative to smoking. Rather than burning the herb, which produces irritating, toxic, and carcinogenic by-products, a vaporizer heats the material in a partial vacuum so that the active compounds contained in the plant boil off into a vapor. No combustion occurs, so no smoke or taste of smoke is evident. There are numerous designs of vaporizers you can find out there. The typical design is a box shaped heat source with a separate rubber or plastic hose guiding the THC byproduct to a mouthpiece for inhalation. A new design rising in popularity is the bag system. In this design the heat source mounts a balloon style baggy on its top and collects the THC byproduct, for an easy handheld inhalation system. Whichever design catches your eye, know that vaporizing provides a different high. Try one out and see if this is the high for you. Enjoy!

I Left My Heart in San Fran-Bleezy

by Chris Greeley

Having lived in San Francisco for quite a number of years now, I have been able to experience the beauty of Liberalism at its finest. Marijuana is perhaps the sweetest taste of Liberalism I think I have come to encounter in the City. However, it has been a long time coming: after numerous years of networking to find the finest quality of bud for the best price, I finally got my medical cannabis card. Though it is true that the Los Angeles area (however big you’d like to expand that to) has the most amount of medical dispensaries, San Francisco has a more concentrated amount of dispensaries. (For instance, on my birthday, I went to about 8 clubs in the matter of two hours on my bike; that included patient sign up and purchase-time as well.) I guess it really doesn’t matter, since all you need is one fine, local dispensary in your backyard. But because I get anxious and excited easily, I like to try many different clubs in search of the best quality and experience. If you are thinking of making your way to this beautiful city, and you find yourself in the Haight-Ashbury (like I’m sure many of you will), you should take a stroll down to The Vapor Room in lower-Haight. Perhaps you have heard of it, perhaps not. This dispensary has anything and everything you would probably want. Here is just a short list: at least 3 strands of each kind of buds—sativa, indica and hybrids; edibles—pastries, butters (coconut, too), ice-cream and more; pre-rolled joints of all qualities; and perhaps the best amenity: four perfectly working volcano vaporizers. With a name like Vapor Room, how could they not? For you smokers who enjoy a nice bong, they have a few of those as well. The wood finishing on the ground, the nicely-painted walls, the sliding-door bathroom, the miniature palm trees, the personable personnel; all make for a pleasant experience to enjoy your tasty buds with your buds. I have met a new individual every time I have gone to The Vapor Room, though they have been mostly older middle-aged men who just like to talk. But, shit, they always have the best stories to tell. What can I say, blonde busty babes don’t just linger around medical dispensaries. If you are looking to get blitzed to the dome, The Vapor Room will always have the best Trainwreck your little heart and head will desire, since they have used the same supplier for years now. But like I said, they will always have some of the finest quality for whatever you are looking for; it just depends on your personal preference of high, taste, and price. The Vapor Room, like most dispensaries, has their own strange specials specific to their club, but if you are looking for yr basic bud, it is a standard $50 out-the-door eighth. If you are willing to pay the price, I promise you’ll be feeling nice.

Most Down for the Cause

by Matthew Delarosa

“Any friend of yours is a friend of mine.” Has anybody ever told you that? Have you ever really concluded that any friend of “yours” is actually compatible with that particular person? For that matter would you be equally compatible with all of their friends? After heavy consideration I could only muster up one bud, no pun intended, that truly fit the bill to qualify that statement... DING DING DING! You guessed it, marijuana! So I asked myself, “Who is consequently my pal for sharing an interest in my other pal, Mary Jane?” that's when I started my research on celebrities and other various figures in the public eye that possessed this common friend. Results included the likes of Al Gore, Neil Young, Calvin Klein, Brad Pitt... wait Brad Pitt? I love Brad Pitt! Seven, Fight Club and Inglourious Basterds! All films that were made paramount by the quality acting of my newly found smoking mate, Brad Pitt. It enthused me needless to say. I looked deeper into Mr. Pitt's support for marijuana and my findings revealed that this actor has more than just a simple admiration for greens. Recently in an interview, Bill Maher recalls Brad's rolling paper skills as … “better than a cigarette.” Brad replied, “I'm an artist.” Another interview following the grand success of Inglourious Basterds, uncovered that Quentin Tarantino had recruited the actor for the role of Lieutenant Aldo Raine during a quaint hash and wine session. It was clear to me that marijuana has played a positive part in Brad Pitt's life. So what kind of positive influence has Brad put back? Newsweek Magazine named him as one of “15 People Who Make America Great.” Charities that Brad supports include: Right To Play, Human Rights Watch, the ONE campaign and many more successful organizations providing better lives for people around the globe. I believe it is important we become aware of our fellow stoners, both in the lime light and in your communities, that are contributing role models to society. “Any friend of yours is a friend of mine.” Brad Pitt, I salute you as this issues OtherSide Farms Most Down for the Cause. Each OtherSide Farms Newsletter will include one new Most Down for the Cause candidate who has respect for the sweet leaf and the sweet life. Until then my friends, enjoy life, liberty and the right to medicate!

Thursday, March 11, 2010

Another World-Class Athlete Gets Punished for Using Marijuana

Twenty-four-year-old American Ivory Williams—one of the fastest 100-meter sprinters in the world—will not be allowed to compete on the U.S. Team for this year’s World Indoor Championships.

His offense? He tested positive for marijuana. Now Williams, who just last month ran the fastest 60 meters in the world, will be ineligible to compete for the next three months and will have to complete an anti-doping educational program.

It’s simply maddening to see a 24-year-old world-class athlete get sidelined from his sport just because he used a substance that is safer than alcohol and isn’t exactly what you’d call a performance-enhancing drug. To add insult to injury, his manager felt compelled to issue a token apology, saying Williams exhibited “poor judgment.”

In a related, possibly even more frustrating story, the defending champion in the Iditarod—where dogs do the racing, not humans—might now be disqualified because he uses medical marijuana to treat the effects of throat cancer.

From
MPP Website

Insurance Agency Becomes First to Offer National Medical Marijuana Coverage

A spokesman for Statewide Insurance Services said the new program will include operations related to medical marijuana dispensaries and growers, including workers’ compensation, general liability, auto insurance, equipment breakdown and damage, and property or product loss—including marijuana spoilage.

As the cultivation and distribution of state-sanctioned medical marijuana proliferates in 14 states (and counting), it is only right that such establishments receive the same protections as other legitimate businesses. By taking this much-needed step, Statewide is helping to send a strong message to the rest of the country that this nearly untapped-market is not just credible, but ripe for new business opportunities, and here to stay.

From MPP Website

Thursday, March 4, 2010

Your Tax Dollars

Heres another bit for you that your "unbiased media" hasn't told you, the city of Costa Mesa and several other local cities are using YOUR tax dollars to help the city of Anaheim fight its lawsuit against a group of dispensaries! And we have Firefighters on furlough? WHAT IS THIS?

Keep following your orders and most definitely DON'T think for yourself! 95% of DOCTORS see the benefit, HELLO!!!

How can you stand up for the fight against this with SO MUCH OVERWHELMING evidence contradicting your cause? I guess that kind of answers it for me.

Those oppossed should be ashamed and embarrassed for falling for this!

By the way, is anyone else concerned about the pharmaceutical ads on TV? You know the ones that have side effects like "may lead to Thoughts or sctions of suicide" WHAT? And we're fighting MEDICAL MARIJUANA???

What is going on people? Why do we let those whose children don't have to go to war decide on whether we send OUR children to war or not? Or let those who have health care decide on OUR health care? It's ridiculous, and we sit and watch.

Get up and do something about it! Write letters, talk about it, this is OUR Country too.

How come everyone is so focused on Medical Marijuana?

It's natural and has been PROVEN to have great success at helping a vast amount of ailments. Whether your need is one due to a terminal condition or not, it works and ALL should have access to it.

Why isnt our government concerned about the effects of cigarettes or alcohol? People die from those and yet there are legal. As a matter of fact WE ALL KNOW CIGARETTES KILL so why are they legal? Name ONE benefit from a cigarette? Can you think of one? Didn't think so but keep picking on medical marijuana, that makes sense.

How about the fact that the DEA has a schedule of drugs in which Schedule 1 is the worst and considered to have NO social or medicinal value. Schedule 2 is next and so on... Well, here's the kicker...
Schedule 2
PCP
Crack
Meth
Crank
LSD

Schedule 1 (the worst)
Marijuana

Now, I think we can ALL agree that pot is far less of a threat than ANY of those listed above as a "Schedule 2" drug. Why do we allow this? This is what allows the Government to justify the ridiculous amount of money they spend on the "War on Medical Marijuana"

I we're in a recession! AWESOME!!!

Our cities are cutting back everywhere but they have no problem wasting money pursuing the pot industry when they could be making money from it, that's lame! Think about that. Your property tax money going to wards fighting something that is LEGAL by law of the State but the cities want to ban it and prosecute those involved in this industry, even the ones who AREN'T operating illegally. all the time wasting your money. 56% of California voted for medical marijuana 13 years ago, how many stoners do you think didn't even show up to vote? Remember, that was when college students and such didn't vote in large numbers. Since then, public knowledge and support have grown since then and people are voting now, it's changed. Large amounts of revenue could be generated from regulated medical marijuana, it's a benefit to so many, a threat to none. Why?

Please do the right thing and help us bring the reality of the necessity of medical marijuana to those who oppose our cause.

Friday, February 5, 2010

How can we make this work?!


As I sit and watch my wife struggle with the effects of chemotherapy (which kills you quicker than the cancer it is used to fight) I wonder why our Government allows the sale, for cash, of liquor and cigarettes (which have ZERO benefit to society whatsoever) yet Medical Marijuana (which has been legal for 13 years in the State of CA) patients have to hide and scurry about like cockroaches just to get mediocre medicine. Why would our government turn their backs on those who need the most help? Forcing them to get the most beneficial medicine EVER known to man via dangerous means. Why can't dispensaries accept payment, of cash, for the work done and expense incurred from growing and procuring medical marijuana.

Why is this industry the ONLY one that can't use money as a form of payment.

Why do we allow those WE put in office and that WE pay to not do their job and figure out a way to make this work for everyone? We deserve an answer and solution not arrests of people trying to help the sick?

Don't get me wrong, I'm not a huge fan of dispensaries, not the way they operate now, but there are some great dispensaries out there that generate massive amounts of revenue for the city and State while giving back to the community as well. "The Farmacy" in Venice is one such place. The City works hand in hand with The Farmacy and it seems to be working just fine.

I think its time we held our politicians and city officials accountable and MAKE them find a solution that works for everyone.

The laws change daily in this industry and that's a definite sign of needed change. Imagine owning a gas station and one day it becomes illegal to sell gas, what do you do? What if the law said you can't accept cash for gas? What are you supposed to do? Trade for goods and services? That's ludicrous! What if the police couldn't be paid in cash because it might foster corruption?

Why, after 13 years, are those involved in the medical marijuana industry still hunted down and persecuted as if it were the spanish inquisition?

Why does my wife and many more have to suffer because the feeble minded can't find a solution.

56% of California voted for medical marijuana 13 years ago, how many stoners do you think didn't even vote? Now, with the wide spread media coverage and the general publics understanding of the benefits of medical marijuana, its safe to say that the 56% is MUCH higher now (no pun intended) meaning those enforcing the laws have decided to take the law into their own hands and that should seriously scare everyone, on both sides.

Why vote if it doesn't matter? Do we really want folks to go back to that type of thinking?

Help us find a safe, acceptable way for everyone to benefit from medical marijuana.

You can't tell folks they can't charge money for a legal product, that's unAmerican. We are not a socialized country so this "bartering" idea is completely unconstitutional. We have a right to our medicine and if I'm okay paying cash for it why should the police or government care? Its legal here!

Monday, January 25, 2010

Poll

According to a 1999 Gallup poll, 73% of Americans are in favor of "making marijuana legally available for doctors to prescribe in order to reduce pain and suffering." In a 2004 poll commissioned by AARP, 72% of Americans ages 45 and older thought marijuana should be legal for medicinal purposes if recommended by a doctor. Also, since 1996, voters in eight states plus the District of Columbia have passed favorable medical marijuana ballot initiatives.

Source: Medical Marijuana - The Facts

Saturday, January 2, 2010

Why was Marijuana ever made illegal in the United States?

Many people assume that marijuana was made illegal through some kind of process involving scientific, medical, and government hearings; that it was to protect the citizens from what was determined to be a dangerous drug.

The actual story shows a much different picture. Those who voted on the legal fate of this plant never had the facts, but were dependent on information supplied by those who had a specific agenda to deceive lawmakers. You’ll see below that the very first federal vote to prohibit marijuana was based entirely on a documented lie on the floor of the Senate.

You’ll also see that the history of marijuana’s criminalization is filled with:

* Racism
* Fear
* Protection of Corporate Profits
* Yellow Journalism
* Ignorant, Incompetent, and/or Corrupt Legislators
* Personal Career Advancement and Greed

These are the actual reasons marijuana is illegal.

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