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Tuesday, July 11, 2006

A Comprimise in the Workings?




BOARD TO VOTE ON MARIJUANA PLAN
by Emily Hagedorn, Californian, staff writer, (Source:Bakersfield Californian)
10 Jul 2006

California
-------
After the issue of medical marijuana dispensary regulations came up a few weeks ago, county officials and cannabis proponents met to find a compromise.

It was a nice try, but not good enough, says the Bakersfield chapter of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws.

A revised ordinance is now up for vote at the Kern County Board of Supervisors' meeting Tuesday morning.

The original measure, which was brought up June 13, would have enabled the Sheriff's Department to know each person involved in every medical marijuana transaction, limited hours of operation and required disclosure of any firearms on the dispensary premises, among other things. Since then, those actions have been scaled back.

The Sheriff's Department can only see the names of patients and caregivers when they get a warrant or court order. Dispensaries can be open until 8 p.m. The requirement for disclosure of firearms was deleted.

"We worked it out," said deputy county counsel John Irby. "We want to have a system under which the sheriff can inspect the premises to ensure they are complying with state medical marijuana law."

But NORML, along with some local dispensaries, doesn't want the sheriff involved at all.

"I don't have a problem with there being an ordinance," said Ed Sulla, vice president of Bakersfield NORML. "But we think it should be the health department to handle it."

Jim McGowen, owner of the American Caregivers Collective, a dispensary on Gillmore Avenue, worries this oversight by the Sheriff's Department will allow for an abuse of power.

McGowen's customers are worried they will be outed as marijuana users and lose their jobs, he said.

"I see this as a cover-up the police are using to get what they want," McGowen said. "It's probably going to put these dispensaries out of business, put these patients back on the street ( to find marijuana )."

The sheriff is involved because that department manages regulatory business licenses in Kern County, Irby said. Other businesses that the sheriff regulates include pawn shops, massage parlors and bingo halls.

Other measures in the proposed medical marijuana dispensary ordinance include:

* Grounds for suspension and revocation of the license.

* Requiring documentation of patient physician recommendations and financial records.

* Restrictions on minors using medical marijuana.

* Limit on the number of dispensaries allowed in the county.

The supervisors also will vote on requiring the dispensaries to pay a $166 yearly fee.

Maryjane

Maryjane

For the rap fans out there, here is a song by an artist I have never known.

The Blunt Truth

The Blunt Truth

An hilarious old educational video in the 70's.

The narrator is hilarious. He tells you that will drop from school and that your life will end up hopeless.

New Domain Name!

We have moved! To get the newest updates visit our new URL!

You can now visit this blog at

http://www.weedforthought.com

Sweet

Monday, July 10, 2006

I've Waited All My Life To Say This Bob...420

The Price is Right 420

Does This Look Like Fun?

Anti-Marijuana Public Service Ad

It Taste Like the Chronic...And Yet It's Not!

O'DWeeds

High Times June 2006 Issue Preview

Special 4/20 Episode / June 2006 Issue Preview

This video is from the previous 4/20 of this year brought to you by High Times magazine.

Its a very cool video that opens up with an interview on ABC.

Marijuana Harmless?

Marijuana Harmless Commercial

This video is worth watching. Nothing too special. It does make as much sense as the "harmless?" commercials you do see on TV though.

13th Annual Cannabis Cup with Jefferson Starship

Miracles - Jefferson Starship Music Video

A great live performance by Jefferson Starship at the 13th Annual Cannabis Cup in Amsterdam.

Sunday, July 09, 2006

Jon and Marijuana

Jon and Marijuana

A funny clip from the recent airing of The Daily Show.

We have a kitchen!?

Homer: We have a kitchen?!

This is Homer Simpson on ganja.

Saturday, July 08, 2006

DEA Raids Medical Marijuana Stores Again...



Once again during the week the DEA has raided San Diego Medical Marijuana shops.

Click here to read about how demonstrators are fighting back.

Shhh - Fools In Love

Shhh - Fools In Love

Another music video for the day that was just added to YouTube.

The music video for the song "Fools In Love" by Shhh. Featuring footage from the 1938 classic 'Reefer Madness'.

Hashish - The Drug of a Nation

Hashish - The Drug of a Nation

A very cool foreign music video

Good News for Arkansas



MARIJUANA GROUP TRYING TO GET TWO ISSUES ON BALLOT
by Trish Hollenbeck, Northwest Arkansas Times, (Source:Northwest Arkansas Times)
07 Jul 2006

Arkansas
-------
Members of a group who support medical use of marijuana and making enforcement of marijuana laws a low priority by local police conducted a press conference Thursday in front of the Fayetteville Town Center.

Luke Vinze, a representative with Fairness for Fayetteville, gave a presentation of the organization's goals during the conference. There were a handful of people attending.

The group is circulating two local initiatives: one to allow doctors to recommend the use of medical marijuana for seriously ill patients, and another to make adult misdemeanor marijuana possession a lower priority for the city's police. Vinze said 5,000 signatures are needed for each petition to be put on the ballot, and the group has so far collected at least 1,000 signatures for each petition. There is a September deadline.

The group, Vinze said, will probably be set up each Saturday on the Fayetteville downtown Square to try to collect signatures.

"These are both very controversial issues and each side has its pros and cons," Vinze said.

The group's goal, he said, is to open the subject up to debate.

The proposal on medical marijuana would allow seriously ill patients who obtain a physician's recommendation to use medical marijuana without penalty. It would also allow physicians to recommend medical use of marijuana to a person who is seriously ill, without fear of prosecution.

The low priority initiative would make violent and property crimes a higher priority for law enforcement than an adult misdemeanor marijuana possession.

As a medicine, Vinze said, marijuana is routinely used to treat multiple sclerosis, AIDS, the effects of chemotherapy, epilepsy and glaucoma, among others.

Twelve states, he said, have legalized the use of medicinal marijuana and results have been successful.

There is a synthetic use of marijuana regulated by the Food and Drug Administration in pill form and prescribed by thousands of physicians, Vinze said. It is called marinol. While it works for some patients, he said, it lacks several therapeutic compounds and is more psychoactive than natural cannabis.

Twelve states, he said, have passed legislation similar to a low-priority initiative and marijuana has not been shown to increase in use.

Ryan Denham, president of the organization, wrote in an e-mail that the medical petition simply says that a doctor is allowed to recommend the use of marijuana, not prescribe it.

The low priority petition, he said, states that marijuana is the lowest priority in the city of Fayetteville, but it would not change any fines.

"Arkansas is not a home rule' state, which means we are not allowed to pass laws in a municipality or county that contradict state code. So instead of lowering the fines, we said that adult misdemeanor offenses are the lowest priority, and also limited Fayetteville's budgetary process to not allow any money to be spent to enforce state or federal marijuana laws, " he stated.

Columbia, Mo., he said, passed similar petitions, even though there is a state law that states that marijuana is illegal.

Friday, July 07, 2006

Tommy Chong 'Marijuana Martyr'



MARIJUANA MARTYR
by Mark Leiren-Young, (Source:Georgia Straight)
06 Jul 2006

Ontario
-------
TORONTO--It wasn't the marijuana that made Tommy Chong paranoid. It was the jail time. The world's most famous stoner figures he was busted by the U.S. government for being the world's most famous stoner.

When half of the counterculture comedy duo Cheech & Chong had his Los Angeles--area home raided by the DEA in 2003, his first response beat the late-night comics to the inevitable punch line. Asked if there were any drugs on the premises, he replied, "Of course--I'm Tommy Chong."

A/K/A Tommy Chong, Josh Gilbert's documentary about the comedian's trial and transformation into marijuana martyr and reluctant activist is more chilling than funny as it looks at the lengths the U.S. government went to set the comedian up and send him to jail.

Chong, wife Shelby, and their friend and video biographer Josh Gilbert, are sharing a couch in a corner of the bar at the Hotel InterContinental at the Toronto International Film Festival, and when they hear I'm from the Georgia Straight they smile like I'm a long-lost B.C. bud.

Chong drawls the name and laughs like he's about to launch into a routine. Shelby turns to him and asks, "Didn't Cheech try to get a job writing for them when he came to Vancouver?" Then she turns to me to make sure I know she and her husband are both from Vancouver and share a few stories about running nightclubs in the '60s before we talk about the movie.

The first shock to anyone who followed Chong's case is that he didn't go to jail over drugs: he was busted for selling bongs to states where they're illegal. It was less like charging Al Capone with tax evasion than nailing him for spitting on the sidewalk. Or going into Iraq looking for weapons of mass destruction and finding um, whatever it was they found.

In A/K/A Tommy Chong ( playing Friday to Thursday [July 7 to 13] at the Vancity Theatre ), Tommy says prison changed him but doesn't talk much about how. When I ask in person, he starts with the standup response: "I saw God in prison. They say when you go to prison you will find God. And I found Him. Unfortunately, I left Him in prison."

We all laugh as he continues the riff. "He's still in prison. Well, they need Him in there. And God's a stoner. It changed me; it made me more humble. In fact, I'm the most humblest guy you'll ever meet. You can't get any more fucking humble than me."

Shelby's continues with: "It made him better-looking, as you can see in the movie--before and after. That shows you what no drinking and a lot of sleep does for you."

Chong chimes in that it made him "more needy".

Shelby grins at him and doesn't miss a beat. "No, you always were needy." They both laugh, then Shelby stops laughing, her smile vanishes, and she switches gears. "I think it changes how we feel about America. That anybody can come and do whatever they want to you, it made us much more fearful."

Chong nods. "Well, yeah, we're rape victims basically."

"Yeah," says Shelby. "And we're paranoid. I'm a lot more paranoid now."

She and Chong share a look. Chong's case is full of ironies. A much bigger one was that he wasn't actually directly connected to the crime he was charged with.

Says Tommy: "First of all, it was my son's company. So he was the one that actually committed the crime, his company."

Then Shelby adds: "But I signed the cheque for the company."

"She signed a cheque," says Tommy with a sigh.

"So that means that I " and Shelby's voice trails off.

"That she was part of the conspiracy," says Tommy. "I was actually the only one that could have walked because there was no paper on me."

That gets to the biggest irony. Chong pleaded guilty to a crime he wasn't involved with in exchange for his wife and son's freedom. Says Gilbert: "When this was happening to him and when they were holding his wife and his son's freedom hostage and weren't allowing him to speak about what was going on I said: 'I'll speak for you. This story needs to be told.' I was infuriated."

The Chongs say they considered moving home to Canada after Tommy's stint in jail but decided there was no point. "Look at Marc Emery and the seeds," says Tommy. "You can run, but you can't hide from these guys. If they wanna getcha, they getcha. I figured out if they wanted to off me, they would off me."

Gilbert was given almost complete access to the Chongs' life during the trial and jail term--but he'd had plenty of access before that too. They'd been friends for almost 15 years, meeting when Chong was working on Far Out Man.

"One of my quirks is that I collect weird but talented people, like Cheech," says the comedian. "Cheech was up in Canada, dodging the draft and delivering carpets for a living and we met--it was like a very cosmic meeting. Josh, it was the same thing. I met Josh at a film company that we did a film with."

Tommy's most cosmic connection, though, has been with Shelby. He was playing in a band in White Rock when he first saw her. He almost blushes as he says, "When she walked in, my heart and my mouth fell open. I was literally stunned."

Shelby's eyes are locked on his as she adds, almost under her breath, "and he got me, and he got me."

"It took a lot of years," Chong says. "But what happened--we became friends. Because I was married, we were just friends. I owned a nightclub and her and her sister couldn't get into any other nightclub and we were friends for years and the friendship just developed."

Shelby continues the story. "He was so crazy. I liked him because he was as crazy as me."

They both laugh before Chong adds: "She's always been my guiding brain. I could be as crazy as I wanna be because she would encourage me."

Then Shelby laughs again. "Yeah. Look where it ended up. You went right to jail."

Thursday, July 06, 2006

Hooked

Hooked - Illegal Drugs and How They Got That Way (Vol. 1)

A History Channel Special

Wednesday, July 05, 2006

420 Revolution

420Revolution

A cool little music video that was uploaded recently

Nice seeing pictures of pro marijuana movements

July 4 Smoke-In Goes Patriotic!

July 4 Smoke-In Goes Patriotic!

What is more patriotic than Uncle Sam smoking a blunt?

How to Avoid being Arrested by Cops

A must see video

Know your rights and learn how to not to get arrested

Watching this video and knowing my rights has saved my ass in numerous situations

Tuesday, July 04, 2006

Girls Gone Weed Wish You a Happy 4th!




The girls from The ggdub gang wishes you a happy 4th!

If you don't know who these girls are or what they are for, I'll make a post later this week because I'm getting ready to have a good day for my 4th.

Time to Get High for 4th of July!



Happy 4th of July!

Every one have a good day and toke up and watch things explode

I'm pleased to see that the American Flag will fly free this weekend, narrowly escaping Congress' attempt to cage it and make it subservient to their political agendas.

Take a moment to remember what July 4th is about.

We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.--That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed

Nowhere in the Declaration of Independence did the founders say that they were doing this in order to form a powerful and unaccountable central administration. Nowhere in the Declaration of Independence did the founders say that this was necessary to prevent the cultivation and consumption of a plant. Nowhere in the Declaration of Independence did the founders say that they were doing this in order to lock up millions of nonviolent American citizens, or to give police the power of storming into and ransacking your house in the middle of the night.

Independence Day is not a celebration of military victory. It is about deciding to be free, and declaring to the world the importance of that freedom -- freedom from tyranny. But it's a decision that must be reaffirmed constantly, or tyranny will infiltrate and proliferate.

Reaffirm now.


This excellent peice of writing from the Drug WarRant.

Monday, July 03, 2006

Weed Harmless?



I know, I have flooded the day with videos but this is the last one. This is a very creative flash "DVD" that spoofs the anti-marijuana commercials on TV.

Check it out by clicking here.

Reefer Madness Parody

Reefer Madness Parody

An hilarious parody done by That 70's Show.

If you haven't seen the original Reefer Madness click here to watch it

Even Stephen-Medical Marijuana

The Daily Show - Medical Marijuana

I remember seeing this episode when it originally aired back in 2001.

A classic and humorous clip of two Stephens debating Medical Marijuana

Sunday, July 02, 2006

Moms Know Better

http://denverpost.com/search/ci_3986708
Source: Denver Post
Article Launched: 06/28/2006 01:00:00 AM MDT




One soccer mom's take on the drug war
By Jessica Peck Corry

I hope my daughter will never smoke marijuana. Regardless of whether she does one day, I know one thing for sure: Keeping it illegal can only harm her future.

Since 1998, the Office of National Drug Control Policy has spent more than $2 billion in taxpayer dollars on twin advertising campaigns seeking to discourage marijuana use. The first speaks to parents, calling them the "Anti-Drug." It fails before it begins. Good parents are going to talk to their children about drugs. All the feel-good ads in the world aren't going to get indifferent parents to engage in such an awkward but essential dialogue.

The second campaign fails as well. In these, youthful but sophisticated graphics tell kids not to use marijuana. If there is one sure way to get adolescents to smoke pot, tell them that the government and their parents don't want them to. In fact, a recently published national study indicates that after viewing commercials for this campaign, young people were more likely to exhibit positive responses about the drug.

Politicians whisper quietly behind closed doors about the insanity of the drug war. Neither party, however, has had the courage to take a stand against prohibition publicly. Just imagine if the $2 billion invested in these ads - or the billions more spent prosecuting peaceful marijuana users every year - had been diverted instead into tuition grants for needy students or back to taxpaying parents who could directly invest in college funds.

Earlier this year, many Colorado Republicans - myself included - expressed outrage against a new statewide smoking ban, saying it runs contrary to our American ethos of individual rights, private property rights, and personal responsibility. But where is the GOP's outrage now as the government spends billions to tell people they can't make the decision to use marijuana, a drug proven to be less harmful than cigarettes?

Democrats are no less guilty. They silently watch as our government's addiction to prohibition becomes a national epidemic, taking money out of the pockets of working families and sending thousands behind bars every year.

Both parties do nothing because they believe in the same urban myth. They know they must get the "soccer mom" vote if they want to win, but they are confused on how to achieve this. Their logic goes like this: Moms don't like drugs. Moms don't want their kids to use drugs. Do not advocate legalization or decriminalization if you want moms to vote for your party.

This strategy is tied to reliable studies demonstrating that women are now the decisionmakers

Advertisement

in most American families. Just as mom decides which brand of toilet paper to buy for her family, she increasingly plays decisionmaker when it comes to voting. Democrats and Republicans alike believe they would gain nothing by advocating an end to prohibition, but both have failed to consider that they might just gain votes if they could learn to speak to mothers about drugs in a way that they could relate to.

Parents across America are trying to find a way to fund college. By legalizing marijuana, taxing it, and turning this revenue into college scholarships and treatment programs, the future of every child could be just a little bit brighter.

Compare this with the system we have now. Marijuana prohibition, violated by millions every year, has become the laughing stock of American public policy. Kids have seen first-hand that it's not as damaging as they've been led to believe. In the process, they begin to believe that some laws aren't meant to be obeyed. This is by far prohibition's most damaging side effect and only makes the job of being a mom that much tougher.

When I sit my daughter down to talk about marijuana, I'm not going to sugar-coat the facts. Marijuana can be addictive and destructive - just as alcohol can be - when abused. I'm going to let her know that life is exciting enough without turning to drugs for fun. She will learn that every law should be respected and that she should work to change those she believes are unjust.

At the end of the day, our government knows it cannot enforce marijuana prohibition. In the absence of being able to do so, it sends the damaging message to our young people that marijuana should be illegal simply because "I'm the government, and I said so." Moms know better - and may ultimately be the single key to bringing sanity back to American drug policy.

Jessica Peck Corry (Jessica@i2i.org) is a public policy analyst with the Independence Institute, where she specializes in civil rights, higher education, and land use policy.

Saturday, July 01, 2006

LEAP Promo video Law Enforcement Against Prohibition

This is seriously one of the best videos regarding the drug policy in America. If you have any interest on the drug policy in America, then you MUST watch this video!

A common sense argument against the drug war. Made by former drug-warriors. In 4 years LEAP has gone from 5 members to over 5,000 asking for and end to the drug war.. Talks about the downfalls of the drug war and the harm it does. Calls the drug war what it is Prohibition and we all know prohibition doesn't work.
Additional search terms drugs legalize cops marijuana 420 norml


Get Arrested For Having Cancer?



A big vote went down in Congress this week regarding the prosecution of Medical Marijuana patients. Millions of cancer and AIDS patients are still able to get prosecuted by federal agents. I haven't been able to post it in this blog yet though because I have had a lot going for me these past few days, but it is all cleared up now.

Anyways, instead of writing my own. Check out this excellent piece written for I'm not paranoid, it's true.

Its a great piece with a great video. Check it out and I'll make sure to keep you up to date from now on :)