06 Jan 2009 - "Stockton to issue pot ID cards "
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County offices in Stockton will accept applications for a medical marijuana identification card beginning Monday. San Joaquin County medical marijuana users can get identification cards in Stockton beginning Monday. The San Joaquin County Board of Supervisors in November agreed to allow county denizens to legally buy and use pot for legally deemed medical reasons. Since 1996, the state has allowed Californians to use marijuana medically, but it’s up to municipal governments to grant that permission within city limits. The federal government still considers all marijuana use illegal. The Drug Enforcement Agency has the legal authority to arrest cannabis users on federal drug charges. Tracy considers sale of cannabis an unapproved retail transaction and won an appeal two years ago brought by one retailer who fought to sell the stuff from his alternative wellness store. The annual cost for a photo identification card is $141. Medi-Cal recipients will pay a discounted rate of $71. Applications can be picked up from the Vital Records Office, 1601 E. Hazelton Ave., in Stockton or downloaded from the California Department of Public Health Web site at www.dhs.ca.gov/mmp. To qualify, patients must live in the county, have legal identification like a driver’s license and present written permission from a doctor that the applicant has been diagnosed with a serious medical condition considered treatable by medical marijuana. Completed applications are only accepted by appointment. For information: 468-8600. |
06 Jan 2009 - " CANNABIS CENTRAL TheStar.com | GTA | Law or no, these joints are smokin' in the city Law or no, these joints are smokin' in the city"
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When police raided the Kindred Café Nov. 20 for allegedly trafficking marijuana, it shone a spotlight on one of the city's biggest open secrets.
There are places where you can smoke weed with relative impunity, provided you don't make a scene.
With a couple of well-known pot cafés and a smattering of private smokers' clubs – not to mention a thriving network of bong shops and hemp stores – Toronto's marijuana scene rivals Vancouver's, according to some herb aficionados.
Most of the action centres on "Yongesterdam," a strip of Yonge St. near Wellesley St. nicknamed after pot-friendly Amsterdam.
Each summer, pot activist Matt Mernagh leads a weekly tour of the area's cannabis community, showing off what he considers one of the city's untapped tourist attractions.
The tour starts at Vapor Central, a vaporizer store and "tester lounge," then on to various seed and hemp stores. If the group feels particularly energetic, Mernagh says, they'll hit the Hot Box Café in Kensington Market, famous for its backyard "potio."
The café is among a handful of establishments in the city that allow customers to smoke weed, though owner Abi Roach stresses they don't sell it in any form.
Another is the Kindred, on Breadalbane St., which reopened days after its owner, Dominic Cramer, turned himself in to police on Nov. 24. Cramer is scheduled to appear in court Jan. 13.
Both the Hot Box and the Kindred regulate pot smoking on the premises, limiting it to adults in specific areas. But despite the Kindred's official mission to host medicinal marijuana use, neither venue requires customers to show their government-issued licences.
Which makes it technically illegal, as indicated in the cafés and on their websites. So how come they still exist?
Police rely heavily on complaints, so if no one complains about a particular spot, it may never be discovered, said Det. Sgt. Paul MacIntyre of the Toronto Police drug squad.
Once officers become aware of such a place, they have to investigate – and arrest anyone found to possess marijuana, he said. But that doesn't mean the venue will close.
"If the people who own the business aren't involved in the sale or distribution of drugs, they won't be charged," MacIntyre said. At the homey three-year-old Kindred, business has fallen by about a third since the raid, said spokesperson Chad Cooke.
Its main floor, where marijuana smoking is not permitted, was empty early on a recent Friday evening. So was its stylish second-floor private room, appointed with flat-screen TVs, DVDs and vaporizers.
On its tented rooftop third floor, where smokers can congregate for a fee of $5 – $2.50 for people with medical exemptions – three patrons sat quietly on the folding chairs Cooke bought after the police took the café's furniture. "We're not quite as busy as we were before," he said. "I'm sure some people are a little apprehensive about coming, not knowing exactly what the climate's going to be or if the police are going to come back."
Lawyer Alan Young, who represents Cramer and the Kindred, says police often turn a blind eye when it comes to recreational tokers.
"The sole reason these cafés can operate with some degree of impunity is that marijuana possession is one of the lowest priorities with police," Young said.
Though federal law doesn't specify where licensed users can and can't light up, they receive an information package warning them not to smoke in a public place or expose others to second-hand smoke, Heath Canada spokesperson Philippe Laroche said in an email.
But there's little health inspectors can do, since the province's smoking ban applies only to tobacco products, said Rob Colvin, spokesperson for Toronto Public Health.
Mernagh says tourists are often shocked and amazed to see others openly flouting marijuana laws inside a coffee shop or store.
"People like us because we're so out of the cannabis closet."
With files from Daniel Dale
06 Jan 2009 - "2008: The Year In Review - NORML's Top 10 Events That Shaped Marijuana Policy"
This Week's News from NORML
2008: The Year In Review - NORML's Top 10 Events That Shaped Marijuana Policy
#1 Landslide At The Ballot Box: Election Day Voters Reject Bush War Doctrine
Millions of Americans nationwide voted on Election Day for marijuana law reform, approving nine out of ten ballot measures to liberalize penalties on cannabis use and possession. In Massachusetts, where 65 percent of voters decided to reduce marijuana possession penalties to a $100 fine, and Michigan, where 63 percent of voters approved legalizing the medical use of cannabis, supporters for pot law reform outnumbered supporters for President-Elect Barack Obama. Read the full story at: http://www.norml.org/index.cfm?Group_ID=7742 .
#2 Members Of Congress Demand An End To Federal Pot Possession Arrests
Members of Congress convened a Capitol Hill press conference in July to demand lawmakers enact legislation to eliminate the government's authority to arrest and prosecute adults who possess marijuana. Lawmakers called on colleagues to endorse HR 5843, which sought to remove federal penalties for the possession and non-profit transfer of marijuana by adults.
The legislation was the first proposal introduced in Congress in 30 years to eliminate criminal marijuana penalties. Read the full story at: htp://www.norml.org/index.cfm?Group_ID=7670 .
06 Jan 2009 - "Medical Marijuana Bad?: Oregonian Newspaper Good? PART ONE"
Phillip Leveque has spent his life as a Combat Infantryman, Pharmacologist, Toxicologist and Physician.
![]() University
of Michigan 4th year Graduate Student Natasha Snider is part of a team
that is investigating the oxidative pathway of anandamide metabolism
and focusing on the cytochrome P450 enzymes. |
(MOLALLA, Ore.) - The Oregonian newspaper seemingly has NOT been able to print even a neutral article about medical marijuana users or the whole shebang even though they know that over 22 thousand Oregon patients have permits approved by 3 thousand doctors.
I have been their target of abuse even though I was completely cooperative with them for a dozen or more stories. The final straw was when The Oregonian printed that “(Dr. Leveque) was a danger to all of his patients and the public in general”.
If they had an ounce of veracity claimed by journalists they knew this was totally false. They can’t find one person of my 4 thousand patients whom I have harmed. There wasn't one.
The Oregonian on Dec. 24th probably inadvertently gave all Oregon MJ users, legal or otherwise, a grand Christmas present.
On page D-1 they printed a story about using magnets to treat the brain for depression etc. This is called Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (TMS).
This seems to be something like Electro Convulsive Treatment (ECT) used for many years to treat schizophrenia and other psychiatric problems. (It didn’t work all that well!)
06 Jan 2009 - "Taking the fun out of pot"
Newshawk: CMAP http://www.mapinc.org/cmap
Pubdate: Monday, January 5, 2009
Author: Connie Littlefield
Note: Connie Littlefield's films include, Hofmann's Potion: The Early Years of LSD, and
Damage Done: The Drug War Odyssey.
Taking the fun out of pot
Low rates of use in the Netherlands demonstrate that the best way to assure teens will
try marijuana is to tell them it's illegal
By Connie Littlefield
It's official: the Dutch have managed to make pot smoking uncool. The Dutch don't smoke
nearly as much cannabis as Canadians, which is surprising because cannabis use is legal
in the Netherlands. What can we learn from this?
Cannabis is not taboo, as it is in North America, under prohibition. That could be why
there is no real attraction for Dutch youth to take up the practise. UN statistics tell
it like it is: 16.8 per cent of adult Canadians have tried cannabis, yet only 6.1 per
cent of Dutch have (2007 World Drug Report, United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime).
Yet cannabis is legally available in one of 280 licensed coffee shops in the Netherlands.
Obviously, there is no connection between availability and higher consumption rates.
06 Jan 2009 - "Ten tips for would-be letter writers"
Is one of your New Year's resolutions to have a letter to the editor published in a national newspaper? As luck would have it, the Post is looking for new letter writers. Here are some tips from our letters editor to ensure that your correspondence will be noticed
29 Dec 2008 - "January 8th - Meeting and Potluck lunch - 11:15 - 1:30"
Jan 8th: Meeting & Potluck
11:15 am - 1:30 pm.
Universalist Unitarian Church,
5500 Inglis St. Halifax.
If you have any items (crafts; novelty items; whatever; in new or excellent condition) that you'd like to donate for an auction being held at an upcoming fund-raiser (date and location TBA), please bring them along.
29 Dec 2008 - "Marijuana Leveque: 2008"
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Dr. Phillip Leveque Salem-News.com
Phillip Leveque has spent his life as a Combat Infantryman, Pharmacologist, Toxicologist and Physician.
(MOLALLA, Ore.) - Some may dislike and shudder at such a name. Marijuana Leveque. I don’t. I have been called much worse – Quack, snake oil salesman. In Italy I’m Dr. Pot, here I'm "most dangerous man in Oregon", etc. Even Judge Francis Young of the DEA said it was the safest drug ever found by man. “REEFER MADNESS”, my foot! 2008 has been an unusual year for me. Now on Salem-News.com I have about 46 articles and about 26 video segments, and at least 300 on Google. |
23 Dec 2008 - "Jan 31st : MUMM's first Cannabis Conference"
MUMM's first Cannabis Conference:
How I Got Busted - DVD viewing,
PLUS, Know Your Rights (what to do if you do get busted)
and How to Apply for an Exemption.
Held at the Dalhousie Student Union Building (SUB) 1:30pm - 4:00pm
Refreshments provided.
23 Dec 2008 - "If Obama Is Pro-Science and Honest, He'll Put the Kibosh on the Drug War"
Obama was frank about his own drug use, so why isn't he more honest about what a disaster war on drugs has been?
One of the many things that made Barack Obama such a refreshing candidate was his frank and unapologetic admission of drug use. True, Anderson Cooper extracted curt "yeses" from some 2004 Democratic candidates when he asked them point-blank if they had ever smoked pot. But Obama has written openly and without prompting about his experiences, not only with marijuana, but cocaine, a "hard" drug. On the campaign trail he even joked about inhaling deeply -- "that was the point," he said more than once. Unlike George W. Bush, Obama didn't hide behind evasive murmurs about "irresponsible behavior," or turn his drug experiences into a setup for some maudlin born-again conversion story.

