"If you see anything mysterious or unusual,
just enjoy it while you still can."
Connect..Assist..Serve..Share..Heal..
Life will get better that way.
People often write asking how they can help as a volunteer.
The HEMP Embassy runs an information centre/ paraphernalia
shop in Nimbin all year round to fund our fight against cannabis
laws. This is staffed by rostered volunteers
who live locally, or are on an extended visit.
If you do not live close enough, there is still an opening.
Every year, on the first weekend in May, we have the Nimbin
MardiGrass Drug Law Reform Rally. To do this takes
lots of volunteers
who live locally OR are attending the MardiGrass. We have volunteers
from all over the world who come to help make MardiGrass possible,
not just stand and watch. It's fantastic to see. Feel free to
come and joint in.
If you ever come to Australia, drop in to the HEMP Embassy
in Nimbin. Try to make it coincide with MardiGrass, if u can....otherwise,
come anyway, or oppose stupid laws wherever you are, and you
will be helping us all...
That is the Norml state of affairs, but if you feel you have
special skills that could help the cause, or see a need that
isn't catered to, then communicate
and contribute.
Send us your hemp related writings or art!
"Reject the illusion of power
brought by violence."
"Men, it has been well said, think in herds;
it will be seen that they go mad in herds, while they only recover
their senses slowly, and one by one." -- Charles Mackaya
George changed over to a blog after June 15th 2008...
Click above address for the November 11th "links by
george" blog. Top right of that page are links to July 1st,
August 1st, August 9th, August 18th, September 1st, September
8th, September 14th, September 21st, September 28th, October
5th, October 12th, October 19th, October 26th, and November
11th editions.
Greetings from Nimbin Australia where we will
be enjoying life in the rainforest as well as within a community
of environmental, political and cultural activism. If anyone
of like mind is interested in a move to the area, there are
several businesses available still for sale or lease. An exceptional
place that would be especially wonderful for someone to invest,
is a historic building along the creek that has the options
of being a movie/dramatic theatre as well as a restaurant with
plenty of space. Do contact me if interested and I can suggest
a contact.
A nice day to you
George and family
"The person
who stands up and says, 'This is stupid,' either is asked to
behave or, worse, is greeted with a cheerful, 'Yes, we know!
Isn't it terrific!'" ~~~ Frank Zappa
It should be noted that the term “decriminalisation”
is something of a misnomer, as cannabis possession is still
sanctioned by criminal law in these jurisdictions. With respect
to cannabis possession, the term “decriminalisation”
has generally been used to describe laws which reduce penalties
for small amounts for personal use to penalties other than imprisonment.
Even under these so-called decriminalisation laws, the possession
of cannabis is against the law, albeit subject to a maximum
penalty of a fine only. Therefore, in evaluating the impact
of such measures it is important to note that we are only dealing
with the impact of reducing penalties rather than the impact
of eliminating penalties altogether.
The New Zealand Law Commission has issued Terms
of Reference for its review of the Misuse of Drugs Act 1975.
Significantly, the review will go back to founding
principles. Why do we even have drug laws? What is the point?
What substances should be included, and should there be penalties
at all?
If you have an opinion about cannabis prohibition
and how we can out of this mess, now is your chance to get involved
and have your say.
Misuse of Drugs Act Review
Terms of Reference
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.
The issues to be considered by the Commission
will include:
(a) Whether the legislative regime should reflect
the principle of harm minimisation underpinning the National
Drug Policy;
(b) What is the most suitable model or models
for the control of drugs;
(c) Which substances the statutory regime should
cover;
(d) How should new psychoactive substances be
treated;
(e) Whether drugs should continue to be subject
to the current classification system or should be categorised
by some alternative process or mechanism;
(f) If a classification system for categorising
drugs is retained, is the current placement of substances appropriate;
(g) The appropriate offence and penalty structure;
(h) Whether the existing statutory dealing presumption
should continue to apply in light of the Supreme Court’s
decision in the Hansen case;
(i) Whether the enforcement powers proposed by
the Commission in its report on Search and Surveillance Powers
are adequate to investigate drug offences;
(j) What legislative framework provides the most
suitable structure to reflect the linkages between drugs and
other similar substances;
(k) Which agency or agencies should be responsible
for the administration of the legislative regime.
It is not intended that the Commission will make
recommendations with respect to the regulation of alcohol or
tobacco in undertaking this review.
So there you have it. The Commission is expected
to call for public submissions soon, so get your thinking cap
on now. For more information, see the Law Commission's website:
A member of a US group of current, former and retired law enforcement
officials is touring New Zealand to raise awareness of the failures
of prohibition, as well as offer solutions that have proven
to be successful.
Jerry Paradis, retired Judge of the Provincial Court of British
Columbia, Canada, and now board member of Law Enforcement Against
Prohibition (LEAP) recently stated that “from a court
perspective, prohibition diminishes all the participants: the
judges, by requiring them to park their common sense at home;
the prosecutors, who know full well that what they’re
doing is futile and damaging; and the police who, because these
are victimless crimes, have to resort to two very problematic
investigative approaches: the search and the snitch”.
The War on Drugs has cost US taxpayers over a trillion dollars
and arrested nearly 40 million nonviolent drug offenders; the
United States boasts the highest prison population in the world.
Where has this gotten the United States? The War on Drugs is
a manifest failure, and has only compounded the societal problems
associated with drugs.
Is this, says Jerry, a policy that New Zealanders want to emulate?
Rumours keep circulating that
the Hemp Embassy is being closed down. This isn't true. The
Hemp Bar has been closed, and the Museum would have to undergo
a radical transformation to stay open. We are supposed to find
out this week when the Museum landlord visits whether this is
possible.
'That which is prohibited cannot be regulated'. There are thus
advantages for governments in moving toward a regime of regulated
legal availability under strict controls, using the variety
of mechanisms available to regulate a
legal market, such as taxation, availability controls, minimum
legal age for use and purchase, labeling and potency limits.
Another alternative, which minimizes the risk of promoting cannabis
use, is to allow only small scale cannabis production for one's
own use or gifts to others.
There are four main choices for a government seeking to make
cannabis available in a regulated market in the context of the
international conventions:
(1) In some countries (those that follow the expediency principle),
it is possible to meet the letter of the international conventions
while allowing de facto legal access. The Dutch model is an
example......
The Big Question: Is it time the world
forgot about cannabis in its war against drugs?
By Michael McCarthy
Friday, 3 October 2008
Why are we asking this now?
Because yesterday a British think-tank published a report for
next year's United Nations Strategic Drug Policy Review, suggesting
that a decriminalised, regulated market in cannabis would cause
less harm than the prohibition of the drug currently in force
across most of the world.
What is the UN review?
It is an examination of progress made since the international
community, at a special session of the UN General Assembly in
New York in June 1998, agreed a 10-year programme of activity
for the control of illegal drug use and markets – the
"war on drugs". It is thought unlikely that enormous
progress will be reported in 2009, as many drugs are purer,
cheaper, and more widely available than ever before. Experts
on drug policy are therefore looking again at the alternative
to prohibition which is always in the background, but which
no office-holding politician hoping for re-election appears
able to contemplate - legalisation.
What exactly is the think-tank report?
It is the Global Cannabis Commission report, launched at a conference
in the House of Lords yesterday and prepared for the Beckley
Foundation, a charitable trust "set up to promote the investigation
of consciousness and its altered states from the perspectives
of science, health, politics and history." The report,
put together by a specially-commissioned international group
of academics and experts in drug policy analysis, attempts to
put the issue of cannabis in a global perspective with a comprehensive
view of the evidence, so that governments can move beyond what
is termed "the present stalemate in cannabis policy."
Which stalemate is this?
Cannabis is used worldwide by "a conservatively estimated
160m people", according to the report, so it can hardly
be said that prohibiting it is successful – and increasingly,
nations cannot agree on the way forward. Some countries take
a hard line – in the US, about three-quarters of a million
citizens are arrested every year for cannabis possession –
while other countries have considerably relaxed their penalties
or their enforcement policies (Until recently Britain could
have been put into this category. Four years ago we downgraded
dope from a class B to a class C drug – until in May,
the Home Office, clearly at Gordon Brown's behest and in the
face of official advice to the contrary, retightened the policy
and made it class B once again, after fears in some quarters
that stronger versions of the drug were leading to more harmful
effects.) But internationally, cannabis is considered an outlawed
substance, so changing the official regime is everywhere difficult.
Why does the report suggest cannabis should be legalised?
It argues that although cannabis can have a damaging effect
in health and on mental health, it is actually far less damaging
than alcohol and tobacco. "Historically, there have only
been two deaths worldwide attributed to cannabis, whereas alcohol
and tobacco together are responsible for an estimated 150,000
deaths per annum in the UK alone," the report alleges.
Much of the harm associated with cannabis use is "the
result of prohibition itself, particularly the social harms
arising from arrest and imprisonment," the report says,
claiming that policies which control cannabis, whether draconian
or liberal, appear to have little impact on the prevalence of
consumption. It offers the alternative of a legal but properly
regulated market.
"In an alternative system of regulated availability, market
controls such as taxation, minimum age requirements, labelling
and potency limits are available to minimise the harms associated
with cannabis use," it says, claiming that through a regulated
market young people could be protected from the increasingly
potent forms of the drug, such as skunk.
Wouldn't the legalisation of cannabis pave the way
to the legalisation of all drugs?
It might well do, which is why, no matter what the relative
harm of dope may be compared to cigarettes or whisky, a move
to end prohibition would be stoutly resisted by opponents of
liberalising the drug laws, and welcomed by those who would
like to see liberalisation brought in. For it is the issue of
prohibition itself, rather than the issue of cannabis, which
is really at the heart of the argument. The drugs-liberalisation
pressure group Transform yesterday welcomed the Global Cannabis
Commission's call for legalisation, but said it would also welcome
its now being applied to heroin and cocaine.
Why is prohibition at the heart of the argument?
Simple economics, say its opponents. It is simply a matter of
supply and demand. If you squeeze the supply of a much-desired
commodity – especially an addictive one – its price
will rise sharply, and in an unregulated market, it can go sky-high.
It then becomes too expensive for addicts for buy, and so they
turn to crime or social deviancy on a large scale to feed their
habits – burglary, shoplifting, prostitution. At the international
scale, the profits are such that the trade is taken over by
organised crime and whole countries are destabilised.
So just how big are the profits?
Transform's Danny Kushlick says: "In the cocaine and heroin
trade, the profit margin is anything between 2,000 and 3,000
per cent, which enables organised criminals to turn what are
effectively vegetables into commodities worth literally more
than their weight in gold." A large number of prominent
and entirely respectable economists have bought this argument,
and insist that drugs prohibition is entirely counter-productive,
just as alcohol prohibition was in the US in the 1920s - until
it was eventually repealed.
They range from Milton Friedman, the US guru of the free market,
to Adair Turner, former director-general of the Confederation
of British Industry, current chairman of the Government's Climate
Change Committee and forthcoming chairman of the Financial Services
Authority. A lot of senior scientists are also strongly in favour
of drugs legalisation.
Wouldn't the legalisation of cannabis or indeed any
drug just lead people down the path to addiction?
That is certainly the position of its opponents; it is more
or less the position of the Government and of the Tory opposition.
Economists might be in favour; politicians are very wary of
legalising drugs. There seems to be no widespread popular call
for it. Its proponents say that although more people might become
drug users, the harm done would be far less than the benefit
gained by taking the world's Mafias and local criminals out
of the equation.
So what are the chances that cannabis will cease to
be internationally outlawed?
With the US running the show? Don't hold your breath.
Should cannabis be legalised on a world scale?
Yes...
* It would immediately take the supply of the drug out of the
hands of violent criminal syndicates.
* Compared to alcohol and tobacco, which are freely available,
Cannabis is not very harmful anyway.
* Any increased use of the drug would be greatly outweighed
by the benefits gained.
No...
* It would be a first step to more widespread, and potentially
disastrous, liberalisation of other drugs.
* It would lead to a great increase in use, which might put
people on a "slippery slope" to harder drugs.
* Some forms of cannabis are very harmful and have been implicated
as a cause of mental health problems.
"Every gun that is made, every warship launched,
every rocket fired, signifies in the final sense a theft
from those who hunger and are not fed, those who
are cold and are not clothed." President Dwight D. Eisenhower April 16, 1953
Report urges regulated
market for cannabis to replace prohibition
Duncan Campbell
The Guardian,
Thursday October 2 2008
A report on cannabis prepared for next year's UN drug policy
review will suggest that a "regulated market" would
cause less harm than the current international prohibition.
The report, which is likely to reopen the debate about cannabis
laws, suggests that controls such as taxation, minimum age requirements
and labelling could be explored.
The Global Cannabis Commission report, which will be launched
today at a conference in the House of Lords, has reached conclusions
which its authors suggest "challenge the received wisdom
concerning cannabis". It was carried out for the Beckley
foundation, a UN-accredited NGO, for the 2009 UN strategic drug
policy review.
There are, according to the report, now more than 160 million
users of the drug worldwide. "Although cannabis can have
a negative impact on health, including mental health, in terms
of relative harms it is considerably less harmful than alcohol
or tobacco," according to the report. "Historically,
there have only been two deaths worldwide attributed to cannabis,
whereas alcohol and tobacco together are responsible for an
estimated 150,000 deaths per annum in the UK alone."
The report, compiled by a group of scientists, academics and
drug policy experts, suggests that much of the harm associated
with cannabis use is "the result of prohibition itself,
particularly the social harms arising from arrest and imprisonment."
Policies that control cannabis, whether draconian or liberal,
appear to have little impact on the prevalence of consumption,
it concluded.
"In an alternative system of regulated availability, market
controls such as taxation, minimum age requirements, labelling
and potency limits are available to minimise the harms associated
with cannabis use," said the report.
It claimed that only through a regulated market could young
people be protected from the increasingly potent forms of cannabis,
such as skunk. It is intended that the report will form a blueprint
for nations seeking to develop a "more rational and effective
approach to the control of cannabis".
The authors suggest there is evidence that "the current
system of cannabis regulation is not working, and ... there
needs to be a serious rethink if we are to minimise the harms
caused by cannabis use."
Last night, the report was welcomed by drug law reform organisations.
"The Beckley foundation are to be congratulated for the
clarity of their call for cannabis supply to be brought within
government control," said Danny Kushlick of Transform.
"We look forward to the same analysis being applied to
heroin and cocaine."
The report is being launched at a two-day conference, which
will be attended by leading figures in the drugs policy world.
The conclusions are unlikely to be embraced by the government
or the Conservative party, both of which are opposed to relaxing
restrictions on cannabis use.
The home of Dr. John Jiggens - Writer & Journalist
As a result of legal advice, we have elected to remove
some material from this page, but affirm our support of Mark
Heinrich aka Smokin Moose and our belief in his integrity.
The short version of that legal advice: prolonged public
internet spats are counterproductive to all parties.
Anatomy of a Historic Bust - Smokin Moose raided
by Australian Federal Police
Today Prime TV and Local Area Commander Bruce
Lyons, hot on the heels of the much publicised closures of the
Hemp Bar (closed) and Nimbin Museum (imminent) walked and talked
Cullen Street applauding himself and handing out flyers as he
went.....
Is this politics or policing?
Nothing is said of alcohol fuelled violence,
or non existent late night weekend policing of said associated
violence consistently asked for by the Nimbin community. Is
alcohol included at all in his "harder drugs" assessment?
Can you smell political scapegoating and posturing here?
Want to make people feel safe: target thugs
more than drugs. Get the balance right.
There is info that suggests that the CBD (Cannabidiol)
component of cannabis could have antipsychotic effects while
the THC component can make you feel para sometimes. It has not
been conclusively tested though. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/programmes/panorama/4104702.stm
ROYAL COMMISSION
INTO THE
NEW SOUTH WALES POLICE SERVICE
FINAL REPORT VOLUME I: CORRUPTION VOLUME II: REFORM
Commissioner:The Hon Justice JRT Wood
May 1997
End of an Era?
Hand delivered Monday 25th August,
and one was delivered to the Museum owner in Sydney as well.
On our reading of the act, they can only close you down for
a maximum of 72 hours a week, and the Museum's Sydney owner
having no real knowledge of what allegedly goes on here would
be unlikely to be held liable for costs, but the owners of the
premises concerned have little stomach for opposing the applications,
and who could blame them. We live in intimidating times.
In the earlier closure there
was no provision for the occupants to attend court, or oppose
the application. We were left standing outside the court building,
our legal counsel unaware that we could not attend while the
decision was made.
MEDIA RELEASE Wednesday Evening, August 27, 2008
NIMBIN HEMP BAR SHUT DOWN, AND MAYBE MUSEUM ALSO, IN
NEW POLICING DIRECTION
The Police have turned their focus to the landlords of two
iconic Nimbin tourist attractions. Letters were hand delivered
to the landlords of the Museum and HEMP Bar giving them only
a couple of days to act (copy above).
"We are at the end of a very long journey," said
Max Stone of the H*E*M*P Bar. "A journey that started in
the NSW Governments back yard at the 1999 Drug Summit. Pot smokers,
alienated across Australia, will remember our colourful Cannabus
with the Big Joint on the roof leaving Nimbin after the MardiGrass
with a mandate from the people: To get cannabis law reform onto
the agenda of the Drug Summit."
Max went on, "Who can forget the cannabus blocking the
F1 peak hour traffic when it broke a universal joint at sunrise
on the morning of Bob Carrs Summit opening. Or the amazing sight
of the Big Joint floating on Sydney Harbour during the 2000
Sydney Olympics right outside Kirribilli house?"
Max said "At the Drug Summit we pleaded to be allowed
to implement a cannabis café model for Nimbin. We wanted
to take a world leading approach to the cannabis conundrum,
to create the model which would be the envy of the world. We
did it anyway, nd it worked way beyond expectations! Hundreds
and thousands of people from all cultures and countries on earth
showed their support for our stance on law reform and most importantly
street dealing was reduced to an unnoticeable level."
It worked so well, that the local Member of Parliament Thomas
George went to the Police Minister who ordered the raids which
finished the vulnerable protest, but the point had been made
and remains clear today. The illegal trade of cannabis is a
dominant force in Nimbin and as we saw during the latest Mardigrass,
closing the HEMP Bar and Museum will do little to help. It will,
however, have a big impact on Nimbin’s international tourist
reputation and daily visitation.
H*E*M*P Bar evolved into a cannabis activist information portal
which occupies a unique position in Australian Internet History,
truly one of earths most enduring and loved websites featuring
live web cameras since April 20th in 2000.
The H*E*M*P Bar will formally end its 8 year live protest
at 4.20 Friday afternoon so as not to compromise the position
our landlords are in. The protest will continue outside the
premises with talk even of a barefoot activists walk to carry
the Big Joint to Canberra….further info www.nimbinHEMPbar.com
66890391, Embassy 66891842 or 66890326, Museum 66891123 www.bigjoint.orgwww.hempembassy.net
Nimbin Museums landlord lives in Sydney, apparently he’s
never been to Nimbin, waiting to hear from him….Michael
Balderstone says, "It’s extremely disappointing the
Police have chosen this direction, with no consultation and
not really dealing with the issue which is causing the problems.
The Museum will be a real loss to a lot of people. It is the
nearest thing to a home many have and certainly means a lot
to many as a daily meeting place . Hopefully we can negotiate
keeping the Museum alive…but maybe I have to go.”
MEDIA RELEASE NIMBIN MUSEUM Tuesday 2 September
UPDATE ON MUSEUM SITUATION by Michael
Balderstone
I had an appointment today with Lismore police,
Area Commander Bluey Lyons, Crime Manager Stephen Clark, and
the applicant, Detective Sargent Michael Smith who is threatening
the Museum’s landlord with the Restricted Premises Act
1943.
It was agreed that we had common ground in that
we all wanted “a Nimbin where mums and dads can walk with
their kiddies without seeing any drug dealing” (Bluey’s
words). The mutual understanding finished there though, because
we had entirely different approaches to achieving that.
I think we need regulated cannabis cafes or a
cannabis market place, and an attitude that drug use is a health
issue. The police believe in the war on drugs despite making
no impact, or even going backwards, with street cameras live
to their police station in Nimbin and nine permanent officers
in the tiny village.
As we have warned from Nimbin for over a decade,
the increased policing of easy to bust cannabis has helped create
a new illegal pharmaceutical drug industry with an unending
supply of almost invisible, odourless pills with no quality
control. At least with organic outdoor grown cannabis which
Nimbin is famous for you know what you’re getting.
I also talked to the landlord of the Museum today.
I expect an eviction letter soon giving me one month’s
notice. The police appear to have made this conditional if the
landlord wants to avoid court and potential costs. They are
also asking that the new tenants of the Museum building install
surveillance cameras covering every room and the extensive back
yard. Police want access to this footage at any time, perhaps
if it was all live on the net they would be satisfied.
It makes little sense even when you realize this
discussion with the Crown Prosecutor, is happening in Sydney
where the Museum landlord lives. He has never been to Nimbin.
If the community is keen enough for the Museum
to stay alive, we may find a willing taker but it is very disappointing
we had no say in any discussions, because after all we do by
far the majority of the police work in the village which resembles
a refugee camp from the war on drugs. In fact the feeling in
town is that closing the Museum will do little to stop any drug
dealing but have a major impact on tourism.
And anyway, if they can’t keep drug dealing
out of jails, which are surely on CCTV, how can we be expected
to?
Further info Michael at the Museum 6689 1123 or
home 6689 7525
LAST WEEKS MEDIA ETC…………MUSEUM
OFFERS TO CLOSE FOR A MONTH TO ASSIST POLICE
The Nimbin Museum is a cultural icon in the tiny
Northern NSW village inland from Byron Bay, internationally
famous for its alternative culture.
Police have put the squeeze on the Museum’s
landlord to evict the curator Michael Balderstone because of
drug supply on the premises. He says in response to the threat
of the Museum closure, “We offer to close the Museum for
a month to see what difference it makes to drug dealing in the
village. It is offensive for police to suggest we haven’t
tried our hardest to keep dealing out of the Museum since we
began here over twenty years ago.
It has been an impossible chore and caused more
than one nervous breakdown for Museum volunteers. We have never
stopped policing the dealing and extremely difficult behaviour
associated with it, in and around the Museum, as the police
themselves are rarely here. The many police I have had to work
with for two decades all know how much I and the Museum volunteers
have tried to stop drug dealing in the Museum.”
“In the month we are closed I ask that artists
be allowed to work inside to restore some of the damage done
to exhibits by the young, disrespectful, alienated, angry and
paranoid youth who risk jail daily in Nimbin just to sell a
bit of pot. Why?”
Elspeth Jones, almost a resident artist and exhausted
dealer ‘thrower outerer’ says, “The Museum
is a gathering place for the community.
Every day we welcome many people to the Museum,
both visitors and locals. Our youth, young children with ever
extending families and their elders share tables, pots of tea
and good conversation with people from all over the world. It
is really a place for cultural exchange, education and for breaking
down barriers. It has become such a popular attraction because
visitors ultimately want to see a place where the locals are
getting on with their lives, where they can meet with the people
who make Nimbin such a colourful and different place and feel
part of it. They see Nimbin warts and all, and mostly love it”.
“We aim to maintain a friendly atmosphere
inside, and have never denied entry to the police. They become
in a way part of it, we have on display the ins and outs of
prohibition to all. Visitors can see for themselves that the
war on drugs is futile, and our endeavours to curb the dealing
around the Museum and indeed throughout Nimbin have been as
successful as the war on drugs world wide.”, said Elspeth
“The permanent closure of the Museum would
create a huge gap in village life, scattering and diluting the
alternative and indiginous culture here even further. We would
be cutting off our nose to spite our face, creating a dull “Everytown”
where tourists eat and leave none the wiser.”
Further information 66891123 or after hours 66897525
Below is a copy of the letters to the Museum
landlord, and Judge, sent today.
Richard,
I went to Lismore Courthouse this morning and
left the letter below for the Judge. I’ll send a copy
to Emma Sullivan at the Crown Solicitor’s Office
also.
I also went next door and left a note and copy
for Detective Sargeant Michael Smith, who I’ve known for
twenty years.
I’m offering to close the Museum for a month
to see what difference it makes to Nimbin’s drug dealing.
I also ask that artists be allowed to work inside during this
time to restore some of the damage done to exhibits and paintings
by the young, disrespectful, angry and paranoid youth who risk
jail daily in Nimbin, and we have to deal with on a daily basis.
I think the police are trying to make you and I responsible
for this which is unfair.
Prefer to talk to you on the phone to try and
sort this out. I have lots of upset people and free legal help
offers. We all want to fix the ugly dealing scene in Nimbin,
but not at the expense of our best attractions.
Best wishes, Michael
Thursday August 28 2008
To the Presiding Judge,
Lismore Court House.
I began my life in Nimbin over 20 years ago when
I rented the Museum shopfront as a second hand, antique shop.
Dealing of illegal drugs was a small issue then in the village,
but even then a divisive one. As tourism grew and the popularity
of cannabis spread, so the dealing grew along with the shops
in the town, now nearly all dependent on the tourist trade.
Over the now I5 years that I have operated the
Museum as a tourism enterprise, my assistants and I have strived
tirelessly to keep drug dealing off the premises. This has often
been at great personal risk and many volunteers have quit because
of the abuse copped in the process. There are numerous signs
throughout the Museums 8 rooms saying ‘no dealing’,
and even detailed, large writing explaining our predicament
and asking for co-operation. Of course many of the young men
dealing cannot read! The police are fully aware of all this
and I have always tried to communicate openly and honestly with
them for approximately twenty years. All that time I've been
a member of the Police Community Consultation Committee.
The big change came when CCTV cameras were installed
in the street, live to the police station, several years ago.
Displacement is a well documented consequence, but it was accepted
that this would eventuate, and it did. All over town, everywhere
the cameras don't cover, the dealing moved there. This included
inside the Museum and in the extensive unfenced backyard and
adjoining block, none of which is on camera, nor in my lease.
So it seems totally unfair that the Museum, Nirnbin's
main tourist attraction, is threatened because the more tourism
grows here, and the more police stop walking the beat like they
had to before the cameras, the worse the situation is getting.
It doesn’t help that Nimbin has a closed Youth Club and
SK8 Park, and the Museum building used to house the youth club.
Also, dealing occurs all over Nimbin and yet the
police continue to target the two business premises, Hemp Bar
and the Museum, who have both been lawfully and actively lobbying
for cannabis law reform. The very reason we have been calling
for a trial of licensed cannabis cafes is to deal with this
impossible and longstanding situation. We have an implied constitutional
right to political association and freedom of speech. The oppressive
and unconscionable use of this legislation by the police in
this matter is a burden on our rights I believe. I invite you
to visit the Museum and Hemp Embassy’s websites, see links
below.
Since the closure of the Museum at MardiGrass
this year, May 3 & 4, Nimbin's busiest weekend of the year,
we have strived conscientiously to keep the dealing outside
the premises and have succeeded mostly because the dealers take
our threats more seriously now because we have a copy of the
affidavit and police DVD of the April 1st raid. Police have
observed this change and there has not been any supply charges
that I am aware of over the previous 4 months. This can be confirmed
by police records.
Before we reopened after that weekend closure
I purposefully went to the police station to discuss what was
expected from me by the police and was told by Detective Sergeant
Michael Smith and the local Sergeant Mat Johnson, who agreed
that the eradication of drug dealing from Nimbin was an impossible
objective, and that I should just continue “to do my best
and try and keep the dealing outside". I have engaged in
an endless dialogue with the Police including the Area Commander
about how to make Nimbin more peaceful and how to deal with
the illegal cannabis trade and the people attracted to it. It
is disappointing that the police recently ceased to include
me in any discussions and there is no acknowledgement of the
more than reasonable effort we make everyday.
Please consider our situation in any decisions
which you are required to make in relation to the Nimbin Museum.
Please also note that I have only been given a few days notice
on this matter the affect of which will have a major long term
impact on Nimbin tourism and the many volunteers involved in
keeping the Museum operational. As the occupant of the premises
I ask to be given a say in the matter when it is heard. Please
advise us of any hearings or how I should go about getting heard.
I have been advised that undercover police have
been offered marijuana in the Museum since the MardiGrass, the
fresh evidence, and wonder why they didn’t arrest these
people. I cannot do their job for them.
The Museum won a major North Coast Tourism Award
some years back and has an international reputation for it’s
extraordinary art, murals, sculptures etc. Our joy is welcoming
visitors from across the planet who come in busloads daily.
I understand the police are just trying to do their job but
I believe they will be throwing the baby out with the bathwater
in this case. And it is not adressing the issue of the dealers
who will remain everywhere else in town.
Wishing you could find the time and come and see
the situation for yourself. My landlord lives in Sydney and
has never been to Nimbin. I am a good tenant, always pay the
rent on time and maintain the old and leaking building at my
own expense usually.
If they cannot keep all drug dealing out of the
jails, what hope do i have?
Your sincerely, Michael Balderstone
P.S. I offer to close the Museum for a month to
see if it helps stop the drug dealing in Nimbin.
I've been reading a lot about Nimbin, and the great work for
hemp you do there, I also want change, so I spend too much time
on this computer, however it is working we are all getting connected,
and there is a legalize hemp/cannabis/marijuana/ganja etc in
every country,so I really do I like the idea of a sort of cyberspace
alliance; with about 165 million of us using , with the right
timing, we have got change!
I'm in the Legalise Cannabis Alliance UK, link is here
who has been fighting medical need over here, with another
medical providing group called THC4MS,
Cannabis Granny is doing a tour with a gentlemen called Howard
Marks soon, in the UK.
Please stay High. Peace love and Respect
Winston
Hi All,
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Act to Remove Federal Penalties for the Personal Use of Marijuana
by Responsible Adults (Introduced in House)
HR 5843 IH
110th CONGRESS
2d Session
H. R. 5843
To eliminate most Federal penalties for possession of marijuana
for personal use, and for other purposes.
IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
April 17, 2008
Mr. FRANK of Massachusetts (for himself and Mr. PAUL) introduced
the following bill; which was referred to the Committee on the
Judiciary, and in addition to the Committee on Energy and Commerce,
for a period to be subsequently determined by the Speaker, in
each case for consideration of such provisions as fall within
the jurisdiction of the committee concerned
A BILL
To eliminate most Federal penalties for possession of marijuana
for personal use, and for other purposes.
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of
the United States of America in Congress assembled,
SECTION 1. SHORT TITLE.
This Act may be cited as the `Act to Remove Federal Penalties
for the Personal Use of Marijuana by Responsible Adults'.
SEC. 2. ELIMINATION OF CERTAIN MARIJUANA-RELATED PENALTIES.
Notwithstanding any other provision of law, no penalty may
be imposed under an Act of Congress for the possession of marijuana
for personal use, or for the not-for-profit transfer between
adults of marijuana for personal use. For the purposes
of this section, possession of 100 grams or less of marijuana
shall be presumed to be for personal use, as shall the not-for-profit
transfer of one ounce or less of marijuana, except that the
civil penalty provided in section 405 of the Controlled Substances
Act (21 U.S.C. 844a) may be imposed for the public use of marijuana
if the amount of the penalty does not exceed $100.
"There are
three kinds of lies: lies, damned lies, and statistics."
On the 30th July
2008 the Sydney Morning Herald ran this story.
Dope smokers not
so mellow any more Kate Benson - Medical Reporter
MORE than a third
of people who present at Sydney emergency departments after
smoking cannabis are violent and half have mental health problems
such as severe anxiety and suicidal thoughts, shattering the
image that dope smokers are relaxed and sleepy, researchers
have found.
The data, collected by the National Cannabis Prevention and
Information Centre at the University of NSW, indicates that
cannabis users can be as aggressive as crystal methamphetamine
users, with almost one in four men and one in three women being
violent toward hospital staff or injuring themselves after acting
aggressively.
Almost 12 per cent were considered a suicide risk. "It
flies in the face of what people typically think of cannabis
- that it is a natural herb that makes people mellow,"
the centre's director, Jan Copeland, said yesterday. "The
reality is that it can make people highly agitated and trigger
acute episodes of anxiety."
She said the study, which covered two hospitals from 2004 to
2006, revealed that more than 9 per cent of cannabis users had
depression or bipolar disorder, 5 per cent had schizophrenia
and 4 per cent had paranoia and a history of self-harm.
"It's the first time we have ever gathered this data and
it is highly surprising. It's apparent that we need a higher
level of early intervention to pick up these problems before
they get to the emergency department," Professor Copeland
said. The head of emergency at St Vincent's hospital, Gordian
Fulde, said yesterday most people still believed marijuana was
a soft drug, but "the old image of feeling sleepy and having
the munchies after you've had a smoke is entirely inappropriate
for modern-day marijuana".
"The grass we smoked in the '60s could have been lawn clippings
compared to this completely different breed of nasty cat,"
he said. "With hydroponic cannabis, the levels of THC [the
active ingredient tetrahydrocannabinol] can be tenfold what
they are in normal cannabis, so we are seeing some very, very
serious fallout."
Dr Fulde said users rarely needed sedation. "They can be
quite aggressive, lose their inhibitions and get very paranoid
like ice users, causing massive problems for staff, but a person
getting nasty on ganja is still not quite as bad as a person
getting nasty on ice."
Oh my god! How
wrong could you be? Does anyone seriously believe this? Time
warp propaganda, straight out of the Thirties.
Professor Jan Copeland of the National
Cannabis Prevention and Information Centre UNSW, and Gordian
Fulde, Head of Emergency at St Vincents hospital have been cited
as sources by Kate Benson. Far be it for me to suggest a Cannabis
Prevention body might have an axe to grind. I cannot remotely
agree with the "study", or the personal opinion at
the end. This goes way beyond anything on the National
Cannabis Prevention and Information Centre website.
We are not in a position to credibly
refute this in the media. It would be seen as Government health
body versus anecdotal hippies and vested interest versus vested
interest.
I'd like to see the study. Can anyone get a copy? No.
It's not released yet. How convenient.
Their 'statistics' do not match my own thirty six years
of observation and experience. I would suggest ringing the Lismore
and Nimbin emergency departments to see if they would verify
this view. I would be very surprised if they did. Certainly
I could be accused of a "knee jerk" reaction by anyone
without experience, but think the article perhaps "politically"
inspired, playing to conservative elements for funding. Of course,
I can't prove anything, it's just my belief.
I don't know what their data criteria were, and which
two hospitals they chose, but am extremely sceptical of their
conclusions. I know I am not a "health professional",
but have lived within the drug using fraternity for a long while.
I haven't seen the level of reaction cited with cannabis alone
as used by a sane human being. I have known people to try cannabis
and feel paranoid, so they don't continue with it, but they
rarely "flip out" about it. Some don't like the initial
increase in heart rate. Psychiatric patients often self-medicate
too. Was there a causal connection between cannabis and the
patient's problems or was just any mention in case notes sufficient?
Do the percentages overlap? Were these patients tested to see
what other drugs were in their systems, or was a patient statement
the only source? It is normal user practice to claim the least
indictable drug rather than confess something more serious.
Culturally, we white folk are blamers and blame shifters. "It
wasn't me; it was (insert excuse)" and we are all accomplices
in this at times.
Very few health or science professionals want to endorse
or defend cannabis because of the career damage that could result
in the "War on Drugs" climate. Like a real war, the
first casualty of the "War on Drugs" was truth. It
was an open licence to lie "in the interests of society".
A professional criticism of the study by a "neutral"
party would be the best outcome, but its more likely Ms Devine
will give it another trumpet shortly.
I have not seen anyone become violent as a result of
cannabis use. I'm not saying it's impossible, just that I have
not seen it myself. Speed and Alcohol are the usual aggravators
of the violent drug behaviour that I've seen. I have handed
joints to drunken bikies crashing a hippy party to pacify the
situation. The aggro one's that were too drunk went to sleep
or outside to puke, and the remainder joined us in good spirit.
All we had to do was share our pot and the gig was good. I have
known violent types to smoke, and not seem to change either
way. Pot was adopted initially by a generation who wanted wars
to end. The demographic has blurred since. I don't think cannabis
has any bearing on acts of violence, except to perhaps diminish
the likelihood. People "overdosing" on cookies are
suggestible, and quite open to the idea that orange juice will
make them feel better, and often agree that it has helped after.
Having a sleep is best. Lethargy passes. Violence is hardly
an option there.
I don't believe Dr Fulde is right about potency being
tenfold. The National Cannabis Prevention Information Centre
doesn't agree either. See
what they reckon.
In 1970 Adelaide you could buy a matchbox of leaf for
$10. I will concede that it was about as potent as his lawn
clippings. I got no discernible effect from it. By 1971 you
could get an ounce of mixed leaf and unmanicured head for thirty
dollars. (Potency doubled?) Of course you could still unwittingly
buy pot cut with peppermint tea, oregano or parsley if you didn't
know better. There were also occasional imports of strong cannabis
and hashish, sometimes just as good as hydro today. (Anyone
remember zombie weed?) It wasn't till 1972 that I finally recognised
an effect and felt "stoned". There were "drought"
periods too. The clientele was neither established nor discerning,
but was slowly learning. In 1975 ounces of seeded heads were
readily available. By 1978 the new marketing buzzword was "sinsemilla"
(seedless heads). Average potency of the market product had
already increased significantly and the price was rising. Leaf
still had a market price. Hydro came in the eighties. The annual
Xmas drought ceased. Dealers claimed it was stronger, and it
should be, getting more sun than a normal sunny day every day,
and having all nutritional requirements met, but not ten times
stronger. 1.5 to 2 times maybe, but shorter acting. In 1986
the first hydro I tried, you could be "off your head"
having a cone at the beginning of lunch break and be functional
again by the time you got back. Good for office workers. Leaf
became almost worthless, and nowadays used in cookies if used
at all. If you compared leafy crap to good hydro you might get
"tenfold", but it would be misleading to use such
a comparison as cannabis of that impotency was only available
for a year or so, thirty six or more years ago, depending which
Australian capital city you lived in.
Analysis of bush and hydro cannabis
done in 2001 didn't agree with ten times stronger. Some
of the bush was stronger than some of the hydro too. In reality,
there are no seed strains called bush or hydro, and it would
be more accurate to compare sativa and indica. The chunky indica
doesn't like getting wet at harvest, being too susceptible to
moulds, while the sativa strains are not as quick to go mouldy.
So most hydro is indica, and most bush dope is sativa.
The article reads like latter day Reefer Madness to
me.
“Lies, damned lies, and statistics”
is part of a phrase attributed to Benjamin Disraeli and popularized
in the United States by Mark Twain: “There are three kinds
of lies: lies, damned lies, and statistics.” The semi-ironic
statement refers to the persuasive power of numbers, and succinctly
describes how even accurate statistics can be used to bolster
inaccurate arguments. - Wikipedia
Webhead
Canadian Medical Cannabis Magazine
- Click on the banner
In the US there is an annual gathering of Rainbow People,
in a National Park. For the last few years the County Sheriffs
and Forest Service Law Enforcement officers have tried to forcibly
remove people, using tasers even.
2007 - Dressed in flak jackets and armed with handguns and
several semi-automatic rifles, Rio Arriba County sheriff's deputies
and Forest Service Law Enforcement officers raid a regional
Rainbow Family gathering because the group's size dictates the
needs for a special permit.
"We were attending the 2008 Gathering in Wyoming - staying
in Kiddie Village. During the pre-dinner prayer circle I noticed
Sherriffs sprinkled through the woods between us and dinner.
They arrested a mother and attempted to take custody of a child.
We reacted nonviolently however this was what happenned. More
to come later - Shot by Linnea Dahl"
Nick Brash - cannabis campaigner
and community artist dies aged 54 after brief illness.
Nick Brash, Illawarra cannabis campaigner who in the 1980s ran
for the NSW upper house representing The Australian Marijuana
Party (AMP) has passed away in Sydney's St George Hospital of
heart failure. Nick suffered a heart attack just after 7 am
on Friday 13th June 2008 just prior to planned cardiac surgery
to replace an aortic valve damaged by a recent infection. He
was being seen by medical team when he arrested but unfortunately
was unable to be revived despite their best efforts. He had
been ill for only a few weeks and his passing comes as a shock
to his family and all who knew him.
Nick is survived by his son Jack, partner Sharyn Lacey, his
siblings and many nieces & nephews. Greg, one of Nick's
brothers lives locally in the Jiggi Valley and another brother,
Justin, has been politically active in recent history as a medical
cannabis patient.
Sale of drug equipment banned in South
Australia June 8, 2008 - 11:34AM
The sale of equipment used to consume illegal drugs - such
as bongs and cocaine kits - has been banned in South Australia
from Sunday.
State Attorney-General Michael Atkinson said it could no longer
be tolerated that the tools of illicit drug use were freely
available from dedicated drug-device shops, tobacconists and
some franchise outlets.
"Allowing the devices of illegal drug use to be marketed
openly is an affront to the laws of this state," he said
in a statement.
"It normalises the use of illicit drugs, particularly
in the minds of impressionable young people."
The Summary Offences (Drug Paraphernalia) Amendment Act 2008
outlaws the sale of bongs, cocaine kits, hash pipes, hookahs,
and ice pipes, with offenders facing maximum penalties of up
to $50,000 or two years' jail.
Mr Atkinson said under previous laws it was difficult to prove
that a retailer intended the items to be used to prepare or
consume an illicit drug.
25th July 2008 And then,
let there be no lights
The state government of South Australia has made the possession
of lights, reflectors, and associated equipment that can be
used for growing marijuana a criminal offense punishable by
up to two years in prison. Also included in the list of proscribed
horticultural items are carbon filters, evaporators, heating
tools, stirrers, funnels, and flasks. Under the new statute,
people caught in possession of such items will have to prove
they have a legitimate reason for having them or face criminal
penalties.
The move is the latest effort by the state government to crack
down on marijuana cultivation there. It also reflects the peculiar
Australian obsession with "hydroponic" marijuana,
which in the land Down Under is widely considered to be somehow
different and more dangerous than marijuana grown by other means.
"These are the tools of the lucrative but deadly drug
trade," said state Attorney General Michael Atkinson in
remarks reported by Adelaide Now. "They're used in sophisticated
set-ups and two-bit backyard operations alike.
This government will prosecute anyone who has these illegal
drug-making devices -- unless they can give a good explanation."
Atkinson scoffed at the notion anyone would be using such equipment
for anything other than growing pot. "With the amount of
hydroponic equipment being sold, you would think South Australia
was the hydroponic tomato capital of Australia," he said.
"Alas, we do not produce as many hydroponic tomatoes as
hydroponic cannabis."
Atkinson said banning such equipment was the best way to attack
the drug trade, which he characterized as dominated by biker
gangs. "It's no secret that those who have these items
aren't planning to bake biscuits for the Girl Guides,"
he said. The move will "make a big dent" against pot
growing, he promised.
Europe: Austrian Parliament
Okays Medical Marijuana, But Only State Agency Can Grow It
from Drug
War Chronicle, Issue #543, 18th July '08
The Austrian parliament approved a bill July 9 that allows for
the cultivation of marijuana for medical and scientific purposes,
Agence France-Presse reported. But the bill gives the exclusive
right to grow marijuana to a health and food safety agency under
the control of the Health Ministry.
Still, it is progress, said Michael Bach, president
of the Austrian pain studies association OeSG. "Any initiative
that makes it possible to develop and provide new drugs for
pain therapy is welcome," he said. "Substances drawn
from cannabis have been used for medical purposes more and more
in the last few years," he added.
It is unclear whether or how quickly this move
will result in the provision of medical marijuana to patients
or whether it signals a softening of official attitudes toward
medical marijuana users. Currently, possession or sales of marijuana
will get you six months in prison in Austria.
Dutch-State Earns a Massive 400 Million
Euros a Year from Cannabis Coffee-Shops
AMSTERDAM - The Dutch state earns 400 million
Euros annually in tax revenues from 'coffee shops,' as the Dutch
cannabis cafes are called. Sales in the sector total around
2 billion Euros, according to conservative estimates by TV programme
"Reporter".
Reporter calculates that the some 730 coffee shops in the
Netherlands sell around 265,000 kilos of hashish and cannabis
annually. That’s 265 ton's of cannabis. WOW!
The bulk of this is grown in the Netherlands. Although coffee-shop
owners do not have to pay VAT, the tax service does calculate
income tax at the highest rate of around 52 percent.
In fixing the tax rate, the tax service assumes that the selling
price of weed is twice the purchasing price.
In Amsterdam, where coffee shops often have non-price-conscious
foreign tourists as customers, the taxman actually applies gross
profit margins of 150 to 180 percent.
The finance ministry claimed in a reaction that it does not
know how much tax the 730 coffee-shops pay. Nice "out"!
Tax inspectors who wish to remain anonymous suggest "they
do not want to know about it in The Hague, as it is all much
too politically sensitive," according to Reporter.
The report reveals that sales of hashish imported from abroad
are much smaller than sales of home-grown grass. More cannabis
is actually produced in the Netherlands than is consumed domestically.
An estimated 60 percent of the cannabis is exported; no tax
is levied on this.
"As export product, Dutch cannabis comes second or third
after cucumbers and tomatoes. Germany and the United Kingdom
are big customers," said police commissioner Max Daniel,
responsible for combating the organised crime behind cannabis-growing.
Although police destroy 15 cannabis nurseries daily, the raids
have no effect on the supply but only on the price of the cannabis.
The growers want compensation for the bigger chance of being
caught in the price they get for their grass. And the tax service
benefits from this too, the reportage reveals.
2008 Nimbin Cannabis Cup Results
Outdoor
1. Little Nimbin, by Bill and Ben. No32 - 18 votes
There is to be a Protest at the Lismore Courthouse
on the 28th April starting at 10:00 am to draw attention to
the ridiculous overkill of the recent Police raid of Nimbin.
These are two of the three defendants it took 50 police seven
hours to apprehend. Where are the "eight arrests"?
Bring your banners and signs to expose their waste of resources
on a political media stunt.
In April 2006 this letter was
published in the Northern Star. Nothing has improved.
Editor
Northern Star
Dear Ed
I refer to recent NS headlines regarding the upcoming MardiGrass.
Firstly, I acknowledge that the interviewed officers may have
been asked loaded questions. However, I wish to make a few pertinent
points in this endless debate:
The police service should not claim community support if they
don’t have it/can’t prove it. I remember the infamous
El Dockin operation in Nimbin where senior police spokesmen
claimed community support. My household survey of Nimbin (answered
by 8 out of every 10 households) indicated that the local community
most assuredly did not support those police activities. My finding
were supported by the numerous complaints to the Ombudsman,
and to the media (including the NS), and by an article published
at the time in a law journal (The Death of Community Policing
by a local lawyer). The police then claimed support from local
businesses, but that was quickly disputed when the Chamber of
Commerce surveyed Nimbin businesses, who almost unanimously
called for police to be ‘less heavy-handed’.
Furthermore, most Australians don’t particularly care
about pot smokers either (eg see the Aus gvt’s National
Drug Strategy household surveys). We have quite a list of crimes
that do concern us, notably child abuse in all its forms, all
crimes of violence, property crime, etc. The NSW Police Service
should adjust its priorities to better reflect community concerns.
Perhaps packing a tiny village with up to 10,000 happy revellers
is a nuisance to some, but it is not a crime. There is no doubt
that trips to the north coast, motel stays, and easy targets
are a soft policing option, but they cost taxpayers’ money,
and utilize officers and other resources that would be better
spent tackling serious crime. Aside from some pot smoking, the
crime rate is low or nonexistent during the festival despite
the thousands of visitors.
Finally, the MardiGrass is an established, major
Australian festival. It is much more than a drug protest rally.
It is a celebration by the alternative culture who settled,
and forever changed, the north coast of NSW. Cannabis is symbolic
of much that distinguished the ‘new settlers’ from
the established farming community, and it was always their weak
spot. Because it was an integral part of the counter-culture
cannabis made the ‘damned hippies’ an easy target
during police operations that often escalated into Drug Wars
(eg who remembers the skull & crossbones on the police helicopter?
the grandmothers carted off the multiple occupancy for a couple
of plants? .. for those who don’t remember, the NS covered
it all in the 70s, 80s & 90s). And one only has to attend
a MardiGrass today to see the culture on parade—they dress
up as fairies and plants, put on face paint, play lots of musical
instruments, display their arts and crafts, and generally enjoy
themselves whilst spreading values of peace, tolerance, sustainability
.. in fact pretty much what they first did in 1973 at the Aquarius
festival, except that they keep their clothes on.
So for heavens sake, readjust priorities and
allocate resources where the community wants them. As an alternative
to drug wars against largely law-abiding and productive communities,
police should be trained in, and rewarded with promotions for,
their community policing activities; community policing involves
law enforcement officers working with communities, in a partnership,
to address each community’s specific local concerns. It
is an effective, and sensible, use of resources.
Dr Carol de Launey
Proclamation
All self recognised Knights Hemplar and Dharma Farmers
are called on a Religious Crusade to Nimbin, home of the Church
of the Holy Smoke, to all meet there on the First Weekend in
May, in the Year Sixteen of our MardiGrass, to participate in
all the Sacred Ceremonies of the Holy Smoke, and smoke the Pipes
of Peace.
It is Thirty Nine Years since the Death of Hippie in
San Francisco; followed by the Resurrection of his Spirit in
a thousand smiling faces. That Smile spread through the Sandstone
Nations in a Decade of Optimism. Since then the Fog of Mammon
has spread. Still we perform the Ceremonies and remember the
Martyrs imprisoned for their private observances.
Make your way past the gathering Orcs. Come to the
Aquarian Shrine. Celebrate with Herb and Friends. Pay Homage
to the Bountiful Seed. Debate, Discuss, Learn and Socialise.
Compete in the Hemp Olympix or Nimbin Cannabis Cup. March in
the Anti Prohibition Procession. Be peacefully free. Make your
mark in the Book of MardiGrass.
Of course, we expect exhemplary behaviour
from our pilgrims. Good heart to you all.
We have built a demonstration
HEMP-LIME WALL in the Hemp Embassy, under the guidance of Klara
Marrosszeky. See Industrial Hemp
for the history of this building technique.
Andrew Katelaris - Hemp-cement Dome
2008 Nimbin Performance Poetry World
Cup
The sixth annual event in August is again
sponsored by the Nimbin community.
How It Works:
Performers have 8 minutes to perform one
or more original poems, not previously performed at the NPPWC.
HEATS are held within the village of Nimbin
from 11am on Saturday 2nd August 2008.
SEMI-FINALS are conducted on Sunday 3rd
August from 11am, at the OASIS Cafe.
GRAND FINAL & After Party are held
at the Nimbin School of Arts TOWN HALL on Sunday 3rd August
at 7.30pm.
Entries Close: Monday 28th July 2008
Judges will select, from the eight finalists,
ONE outright winner of the $2000 prize & the World Cup.
7 Runners Up: $300 each. Peoples Choice Award: $500.
Incentive Awards of $50 and $25 given
by judges during the heats.
Peace & Love for all from Nimbin
Nimbin is a small village, with a huge
heart, and the people who continually support and encourage
the Arts within the community are precious gems.
CHICAGO, Nov 5 (Reuters) - A study of more than 5,000 youngsters
in Switzerland has found those who smoked marijuana do as well
or better in some areas as those who don't, researchers said
on Monday.
But the same was not true for those who used both tobacco and
marijuana, who tended to be heavier users of the drug, said
the report from Dr. J.C. Suris and colleagues at the University
of Lausanne.
The study did not confirm the hypothesis that those who abstained
from marijuana and tobacco functioned better overall, the authors
said.
In fact, those who used only marijuana were "more socially
driven ... significantly more likely to practice sports and
they have a better relationship with their peers" than
abstainers, it said.
"Moreover, even though they are more likely to skip class,
they have the same level of good grades; and although they have
a worse relationship with their parents, they are not more likely
to be depressed" than abstainers, it added.
It did not explain the reasons behind the apparent effect.
The study, published in the November issue of the Archives
of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine, was based on a 2002
survey of 5,263 Swiss students age 16 to 20, of whom 455 smoked
marijuana only, 1,703 who used both marijuana and tobacco and
3,105 who abstained from both.
The report said that while marijuana use has declined among
U.S. adolescents, it has increased in recent years among the
same age group in Switzerland and other European countries.
The study said that while one theory holds that using legal
drugs like nicotine and alcohol opens the door to marijuana
and other illegal drug use, recent research also has found marijuana
may come first and it "may reinforce cigarette smoking
or lead to nicotine addiction ..."
In the study, about half of the tobacco and marijuana group
had used the latter drug 10 times or more in the previous month.
That compared to 56 percent in the marijuana-only group who
had used the drug only once or twice in the same time period.
"These findings agree with previous research indicating
that (tobacco) smokers were significantly more likely to be
heavy cannabis users than nonsmokers," the study concluded.
In addition, those who use only marijuana were less likely
to have started using that drug before the age of 15 compared
to tobacco users, and the tobacco-marijuana group was more likely
to have abused alcohol, the study said.
(Reporting by Michael Conlon; Editing by Andrew Stern and Philip
Barbara)
Patients in California can now buy legal medical marijuana
through a vending machine at a herbal nutrition centre in Los
Angeles.
Starting this week, they will go through security, submit their
prescription, pay and pick up their drugs.
Store employees call it a safe, fast way to order prescriptions.
Vince Mehdizadeh, Owner of Herbal Nutrition Centre said, "They'll
slide a card to get into the store after hours. They'll be greeted
by a security guard right there.
"They'll slide card in and they'll fingerprint in to verify
that it's them. A camera takes a picture of them, verifying
that they're actually at the machine. And they get the medicine
and they move on."
The state will start with two prescription vending machines
offering medical marijuana.
Owners believe they could become as common as pop machines.
(Having checked the dictionary spelling I found I had spelt
this wrongly all my life. The above spelling is correct.)
Paraphernalia is a term of art from older law. Paraphernalia
was the separate property of a married woman, such as clothing
and jewelry "appropriate to her station", but excluding
the assets that may have been included in her dower. The term
originated in Roman law, but ultimately comes from Greek (parapherna),
"beyond (para) the dower (pherne)".
These sorts of property were considered the separate property
of a married woman under coverture. A husband could not sell,
appropriate, or convey good title to his wife's assets considered
paraphernalia without her separate consent. They did not become
a part of her husband's estate upon his death, and could be
conveyed by a married woman's will.
According to American Federal Drug Enforcement Administration,
Drug paraphernalia is any equipment, product, or material that
is modified for making, using, or concealing illegal drugs such
as cocaine, heroin, marijuana, and methamphetamine. Drug paraphernalia
generally fall into two categories:
User-specific products are marketed to drug users to assist
them in taking or concealing illegal drugs. These products include
certain pipes, smoking masks, bongs, cocaine freebase kits,
syringes, marijuana grow kits, roach clips, and items such as
hollowed out cosmetic cases or fake pagers used to conceal illegal
drugs.
Dealer-specific products are used by drug traffickers for preparing
illegal drugs for distribution at the street level. Items such
as scales, vials, and baggies fall into this category. Drug
paraphernalia does not include any items traditionally used
with tobacco, like pipes and rolling papers.
Born in Fremantle, Western Australia in 1941 as John Kenneth
Taylor, Chicken George was "a five foot warrior, a very
tough man in a very little body."
George arrived in Nimbin 10 years ago after hearing about the
annual Mardigrass Festival on the radio.He started out as a
volunteer doing the cleaning at the Embassy and soon became
the public face of the HEMP Campaign (Help End Marijuana Prohibition)
by donning the green suit of The Plantem character, and becoming