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PRESS RELEASE - 20th SEPTEMBER, 2003
Edition
10.
Cannabis News Items From Around the World
Drug users set to take action –
International conference to end war on drugs
Network Against Prohibition Press Release
This year we have seen more than one million Americans arrested
for violations of stale and immoral drug laws, three thousand
Thai people murdered in a state sponsored campaign to eradicate
drug use from the Thai population and the continuation of the
spraying of the Columbian countryside with Roundup by Monsanto,
to eradicate coca.
Just some of the human rights abuses faced by people around the
world as a result of the US led war on drugs. The USA, a country
that now has two million people in jail for drug law violations,
continues to actively and aggressively push its war on drugs on
governments worldwide.
In countries that follow America’s lead, ethnic and indigenous
minorities are targeted, as well as people on low incomes, young
people and other minorities, who already face intrusive monitoring
and targeting by police and other state authorities.
Where is the real drug law reform? After decades of lobbying
and working with government’s to effect change, and countless
reports, inquiries and studies advocating the end of prohibition,
it appears that those governments in bed with the US are no longer
going to come to the table on this issue. Prohibition is genocide
on a global scale that Adolf Hitler would be proud of.
Many communities around the world are taking action against the
war on drugs. Drug users themselves have been fighting back for
some time. In Darwin Australia this month, drug users and activists
will gather for the 1st International Conference on Using Direct
Action to End the War on Drugs.
The conference will feature direct action training, updates on
the war on drugs, reports from demonstrations around the world
and will be an opportunity for those opposed to this genocide
to share ideas and tactics.
It is hoped that the conference will discuss an international
day of direct action against the drug war on November 1, international
drug users’ day. The concept of a coordinated global campaign
of direct action against the drug war will also be floated.
For more info see the conference website www.angelfire.com/oz/syringefestival
The conference will be held from the 22nd to the 25th of September.
It will be held in conjunction with the 2nd Darwin International
Syringe Festival.
Conference and Festival organisers – Network Against Prohibition
www.napnt.org
Call +61 (0)8 8942 0570 or mobile +61 (0)418 985 701 / +61 (0)415
162 525
Drop the (0) if you are ringing from outside Australia.
On America www.drugsense.org/wodclock.htm
On Columbia www.guerrillanews.com/war_on_drugs/doc53.html
On Thailand http://web.amnesty.org/web/wire.nsf/May2003/Thailand
Mum trusted pot-smoking carer
September 15, 2003 - 3:45PM
The mother of two children who were treated in hospital after
eating pasta allegedly laced with marijuana said she had no reason
not to trust their carer.
The Adelaide mother of seven today said she knew her former friend
smoked cannabis but didn't believe she was a heavy user.
"It wasn't like really heavy, it was only on and off ...
so I didn't have any concerns about what she would be like with
my girls," the woman told Sydney radio 2GB.
The two girls, aged two and four, were taken to hospital after
their parents returned to a friend's house to find one child drowsy
and the other almost comatose.
The mother said she was told by the carer that the children had
not been feeling well. "She said 'Oh, they have been sick
all day, they won't eat, they won't drink'." The mother took
the two girls to a medical centre after her sister-in-law commented
they "looked stoned".
The pair were then rushed to hospital by ambulance.
"I wasn't sure (that they were under the influence) because
I don't have much to do with any of that stuff," she said.
Doctors are currently waiting on the results of blood tests to
see how much the pair ingested.
The mother said the four-year-old girl was doing well but her
younger sister had been readmitted to hospital suffering fits.
"They (the doctors) have said there could be long-term convulsions,
hallucinations, things like that," she said.
"I'm still keeping a very close eye on both of them."
Anthony John Patten, 22, and Karen Lee-Anne Anderson, 33, appeared
in an Adelaide court last Friday, each charged with two counts
of supplying a prohibited substance.
- AAP
This story was found at: http://www.theage.com.au/articles/2003/09/15/1063478113191.html
First Tokers of Health Canada Cannabis Call It Disgusting
URL: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v03.n1390.a04.html
Pubdate: Mon, 15 Sep 2003
Source: Canadian Press (Canada Wire)
Copyright: 2003 Canadian Press
Author: Dean Beeby, Canadian Press
Note: As an exception to MAP's posting policy we are providing
the press release below that resulted in this story.
Also: Photos of both Health Canada's 'cannabis' and the medical
grade cannabis supplied by compassion clubs, along with other
research data can be found at http://safeaccess.ca/research/HCvsVICSpics.htm
FIRST TOKERS OF HEALTH CANADA CANNABIS CALL IT DISGUSTING,
WANT MONEY BACK
OTTAWA ( CP ) - Some of the first patients
to smoke Health Canada's government-approved marijuana say it's
"disgusting" and want their money back.
"It's totally unsuitable for human consumption," said
Jim Wakeford, 58, an AIDS patient in Gibsons, B.C. "It gave
me a slight buzziness for about three to five minutes, and that
was it. I got no other effect from it."
Barrie Dalley, a 52-year-old Toronto man who uses marijuana to
combat the nausea associated with AIDS, said the Health Canada
dope actually made him sick to his stomach.
"I threw up," Dalley said Monday. "It made me nauseous
because I had to use so much of it. It was so weak in potency
that I really threw up."
Both men are returning their 30-gram bags, and Dalley is demanding
his money back - $150 plus taxes. Wakeford is returning his unpaid
bill for two of the bags with a letter of complaint.
A third AIDS patient says he's also unhappy with the product,
which is supposed to contain 10.2 per cent THC, the main active
ingredient.
"I'm still smoking it - I would prefer better, but it's all
I've got," said Jari Dvorak, 62, in Toronto. "I think
Health Canada certainly should do better with the quality."
All three are among 10 patients who have registered with Health
Canada to buy dope directly from the government to alleviate their
medical symptoms. Another 39 applications are pending.
Health Canada's Medical Marijuana.
The department was compelled to begin direct distribution in
July, following an Ontario court order this year that said needy
patients should not be forced to get their cannabis on the streets
or from unauthorized growers, who themselves obtain seeds or cuttings
illegally.
The marijuana is being grown for Health Canada deep underground
in a vacant mine section in Flin Flon, Man., by Prairie Plant
Systems on a $5.75-million contract. The department originally
intended that the product go first to accredited researchers to
demonstrate whether or not cannabis is medically effective.
Health Minister Anne McLellan has said she opposes the direct
distribution of government cannabis to patients and that the program
will end if the department wins its appeal of the Ontario court
decision.
The government dope also came under fire Monday from Canadians
for Safe Access, a patients' rights group that is pressing for
supplies of safe, effective marijuana.
Laboratory tests indicate the Health Canada product has only about
three per cent THC - not the 10.2 per cent advertised - and contains
contaminants such as lead and arsenic, said spokesman Philippe
Lucas of Victoria.
"This particular product wouldn't hold a candle to street
level cannabis," he said in an interview.
But Lucas declined to identify the three labs that did the testing,
other than to indicate they're in Vancouver, saying he fears the
facilities might suffer repercussions from Health Canada because
they were not authorized to possess the cannabis.
He also would not say how the group obtained the sample of government
dope.
A spokeswoman for Health Canada said the department can't accept
laboratory findings from anonymous facilities.
"We question the validity of the test results because Canadians
for Safe Access has been unwilling to reveal who did the testing,
and when the testing was done, and under what conditions,"
said Krista Apse.
She said the Flin Flon cannabis had to meet exacting production
standards and was thoroughly tested for its quality.
No patients have complained directly to Health Canada so far,
Apse said, and the department will not accept returns or provide
refunds.
Lucas, who smokes marijuana to cope with his hepatitis C infection,
said the lab results also showed that the cannabis provided at
a Victoria compassion club for patients registers at more than
12 per cent and is freer from contaminants.
He said the government cannabis was too finely ground up with
stems and leaves, calling it "shwag" or "bunk,"
street terminology for the lowest grade of marijuana.
Seed Information
http://www.almightyseeds.com
Only by legalising drugs can we avoid sinking into a US-style
gun culture
By Johann Hari mailto:j.hari@independent.co.uk
Ann Byfield is another pointless victim in the "war against
drugs". This might seem like a perverse conclusion. Wasn’t
the 7-year old gunned down this week in Kensal Green by vicious
dealers who were after her crack-cocaine-selling father? Isn’t
her death yet another argument for
hammering away at the fight against drugs?
No. Ann was killed, clearly and plainly, by our government’s
policy of prohibition. This country has made a political choice
to place the supply and distribution of some drugs heroin,
cocaine and so on in the hands of criminal gangs rather
than phramacists and businesses. Anybody with a
legal trade like, say, selling alcohol, has no need for guns,
because they have recourse to the police to protect their property
rights. The suppliers of drugs do not have this choice, so they
tool up to protect their trade from intruders or competitors.
It really is that simple.
If the vast market for drugs in this country cannot be met in
a legal way, it will inevitably be met like this, in an illegal
way. All politicians know this. After years and years of ‘crack-downs’,
it is stunnningly obvious to all but the most blinded ideologues
that the drugs trade will never be eliminated. The choice confronting
this country is not between some people using drugs and nobody
using drugs. It is between people using illegal drugs that they
buy from gun-wielding criminals, or people using legal drugs and
far fewer guns floating around.
The political choice we have made comes with a price tag. You
don’t see the people who pay that price in the news too
often. They are junkies dying in squalid flats because they have
been sold bad heroin. They are black men shot dead in poor areas.
We noticed Ann only because she was unusually young; a prohibition-related
murder in itself is not unusual at all. They are the invisible,
forgotten victims of a war that has never worked.
It’s often argued that drugs legalisation is a middle class
cause. Legal heroin might look very nice in Hampstead, critics
sneer, but on Moss Side it looks like another catastrophe waiting
to happen. In fact, it’s poor areas that feel the effects
of prohibition. Ann Byfield wasn’t gunned down
in Islington. Entire council estates are not dominated by gun-toting
criminal gangs in Cheshire. We already have effective decriminalisation
in middle class areas: it’s not rich white men who get busted
and jailed for cocaine use but the poor black men who supply them.
It’s not the rich who
are getting shot yet; it’s the poor.
Every time there is a drug-related gun crime (and they happen
across this island every hour of the day), we need to remind ourselves
of one thing. We choose to create the conditions in which this
happens, and we can choose to change it tomorrow if we have the
sense.
Nobody will be shot in Chicago today because of a dispute about
alcohol. That is because the supply and distribution of alcohol
were brought back into the remit of the legal economy in the United
States in the 1930s. The problems inherent to a vast illegal trade
and the network of criminal gangs that it necessarily involves
quickly disappeared. True, some of the gangs transferred
to other criminal activities, like protection racketeering. Most
went bust and found their way into the proper economy, sometimes
as licensed alcohol sellers. We have travelled so far from that
world that it would seem bizarre today to imply there was anything
illicit about liquor store or even a recovering alcoholic in the
White House. One day, this is how we will think about the legal
suppliers and users of drugs.
If we bring drugs into the legitimate economy, we will experience
the same benevolent effects that the US enjoyed after the repeal
of prohibition. In one fell swoop, we could bankrupt most of the
criminals in Britain, and free up the police to deal with burglars,
rapists and murderers.
We choose not to do that. Instead, we have chosen a vast increase
in gun crime. There are now three million illegally-held guns
in Britain, according to the Metropolitan Police, and the rate
of increase is dizzying: over 150% in the last three years. The
deputy commissioner of the Met, Ian
Fuller, has warned that gun crime is "threatening the fabric
of London", and nearly all of it is related to the drug trade.
All the other reasons why this has happened the glamourisation
of LA-style gangsta culture, for example are trivial compared
to the need that criminal gangs have to
protect and extend their trade.
If we do not redress this problem soon by creating legitimate,
licensed drug sellers (probably through the existing network of
chemists), the whole debate about guns will shift in dangerous
directions. We are reaching a point where guns are intruding into
the lives of people completely
unnconnected to the drug trade. Last year, Alice Carroll, 70,
was shot in the back as a gunman opened fire on another man near
her home in a quiet residential cul-de-sac in Longsight, Manchester.
A freak occurrence? Tell that to the mother and father gunned
down in front of their seven-year-old son; to the 14-year-old
shot down with an automatic machine gun; the man
shot in the head during a "road rage" row; the clubbers,
including several teenagers, shot as they queued on one of London's
busiest high streets last year.
Once ordinary people begin to fear unexpected gun crime like
this a moment getting closer every day they begin
to believe that they need guns to protect themselves, and a terrible
spiral is created. This is the case in the United States, where
ordinary people get guns for self-defence and a whole panapoly
of social problems are unleashed: their arguments are far more
likely to descend into shooting, terrible accidents happen when
children discover their parents’ guns, criminals get even
bigger guns than everybody else… anybody who has ever watched
ER could continue this list in several different ways.
The arguments for ‘gun freedom’ from the US are just
as tediously predictable. Already we are beginning to hear these
Charlton Heston-style arguments on the fringes of the British
right: Richard Littlejohn and Peter Hitchens have recently argued
in defence of the ‘right’ for decent, law-abiding folk to have
guns for self-protection, and it won’t be long before some Tory
MPs get in on the act. The Tony Martin case prefigured how the
guns debate will evolve in Britain if gun crime continues to rise
at the current rate.
Drugs legalisation the only real way to slash gun crime
- seems a very distant prospect at the moment. Danny Kushlick
of Transform, the most prominent and eloquent drugs legalisation
charity in Britain, says, "We need to prepare the ground
so that in ten to fifteen years legalisation seems like common
sense. It’s obviously not going to happen in the next few
years."
He is undeniably right David Blunkett blanched at even
the pathetically limited moves on cannabis that the government
unveiled last week. Yet by the time we get around to legalising,
we will might have developed a gun culture that is so entrenched
with ordinary people demanding that they have the right
to own guns too, and with all criminals tooled up rather than
just drug dealers - that we can never reverse it.
A Cannabis Odyssey
By LESTER S. GRINSPOON
Published on Monday, September 15, 2003
My improbable cannabis enlightenment began in 1967. I was concerned
that so many young people were using the terribly dangerous drug
marijuana, so I decided to review the medical and scientific literature
on the substance and write a reasonably objective and scientifically
sound paper on its dangers. Young people were ignoring the warnings
of the government, but perhaps some would seriously consider a
well-documented review of the available data.
As I began to explore the literature, I discovered, to my astonishment,
that I had to seriously question my own understanding. What I
thought I knew was based largely on myths, old and new. I realized
how little my training in science and medicine had protected me
against this
misinformation. I had become not just a victim of a disinformation
campaign, but because I am a physician, one of its agents as well.
To share my new skepticism, I wrote a book, Marijuana Reconsidered,
which was published in 1971 by Harvard University Press. While
writing the book I considered trying marijuana, not because I
thought it would inform my work, but because it appeared to be
an interesting recreational experience. I decided against it in
order to avoid compromising my objectivity.
After publication, I began to explore marijuana as a drug for
relaxation and recreation, and I was not disappointed. In fact,
it soon displaced alcohol altogether. I was 44 years old in 1972,
when I experienced my first marijuana high. I have found cannabis
so useful and so benign that I have
used it ever since-as a recreational drug, as a medicine and as
an enhancer of some capacities.
I am one of more than 12 million Americans who use it regularly.
We smoke marijuana not because we are driven by uncontrollable
"Reefer Madness" cravings, as some propaganda would
have others believe, but because we have learned its value from
experience. Yet almost all of the research, writing, political
activity and legislation devoted to marijuana has been concerned
only with the question of whether it is harmful and how much harm
it does. The only exception is the growing interest in the exploration
of cannabis as a medicine, but as encouraging as that development
is, it represents only one category of marijuana use. The others
are sometimes grouped under the general heading of "recreational,"
but that is hardly an adequate description of, say, marijuana's
capacity to heighten the appreciation of music and art or to strengthen
the sense of connection to the natural world. It can deepen emotional
and sexual intimacy, crystallize new ideas and insights, and expand
one's capacity to appreciate new aspects of life.
Experienced users know that ideas flow more readily under its
influence. Some of these ideas are good, some are bad; sorting
them out is best done while straight. Now, whenever I have a difficult
problem to solve or decision to make, I try to think about it
both stoned and straight.
I often wonder whether, if I had begun to use cannabis earlier,
I would have avoided making some choices I now regret. The worst
career choice I ever made was to enter psychoanalytic training.
Although I became skeptical about some aspects of psychoanalytic
theory during that time, my qualms were not sufficient to dull
the enthusiasm with which I began treating patients psychoanalytically
in 1967. It was not until the mid-'70s, shortly after I began
to smoke marijuana, that my emerging doubts about the therapeutic
effectiveness of psychoanalysis began to make me uncomfortable.
The evenings when I smoke marijuana provide, among other things,
an opportunity to review ideas, events and interactions of the
day. This cannabis review-of-the-day is almost always self-critical,
often harshly so, and its scope is broad. In 1980, the cumulative
effect of these stoned
self-critiques finally made me decide not to accept new psychoanalytic
patients and then to resign from the Boston Psychoanalytic Institute.
I had been puzzled for many years over one aspect of another
bad decision I made, this time as an adolescent. In later years
it was not difficult for me to understand why I made the decision
to leave high school early in my senior year to enter the Merchant
Marine. What I could not understand was why my loving father (since
deceased) so readily acquiesced to this plan; he never lifted
a finger to try to prevent his promising high school student son
from abandoning our shared dream of my going to college. One evening
while stoned many yeas later it came to me, and I now understand
what had seemed so inexplicable about his behavior. Would I have
eventually
figured it out without the subtle alteration of consciousness
that cannabis provides? Perhaps.
There is no denying that many people, especially young people,
use marijuana mainly for "partying and hanging out".
And most non-users (at least until they learn of its medical value)
believe that is all cannabis is useful for. This stereotype is
so powerful that reactions ranging from puzzlement to outrage
greet claims to the contrary. Anyone who attributes more than
recreational and medicinal value to marijuana runs the risk of
being derided as a vestigial hippie. So it is not surprising that
many people who use cannabis do so behind drawn curtains.
If more people in the business, academic and professional worlds
were known to be marijuana users, the government would not find
it so easy to pursue its harmful and wasteful disinformation campaign.
That campaign continues partly because of the widespread false
belief that cannabis smokers are either irresponsible and socially
marginal people or adolescents who "experiment" and
"learn their lesson." These lies are perpetuated when
those who know better remain silent. The gay and lesbian out-of-the-closet
movement has done much to reduce homophobia in this country. It
may be difficult in the current climate where dissenters are intimidated
and profiled, but if the many people of substance and accomplishment
who use cannabis could find the courage to "come out"
in the same way, they could contribute greatly to the diminution
of "cannabinophobia" and help to end the harassment,
persecution and prosecution of innocent marijuana users.
Dr. Lester Grinspoon is an emeritus professor of psychiatry at
Harvard Medical School. He is the author of Marijuana Reconsidered
and a co-author of Marijuana, the Forbidden Medicine. He currently
manages the website www.marijuana-uses.com/.
THAT'S ALL FOR NOW FOLKS!
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