Wednesday, January 31, 2018

Review: ‘Grass Roots: The Rise and Fall and Rise of Marijuana in America’

Well researched and packed with insightful analysis, Emily Dufton’s Grass Roots: The Rise and Fall and Rise of Marijuana in America (Basic Books) chronicles how cannabis went from verboten to Main Street commerce in the U.S during the last 50 years.

When did the effort to end pot prohibition exactly begin in America? Trivial Pursuit fans will learn that the first modern marijuana-law-reform activist was Lowell Eggemeier, who in 1964 lit up a joint in San Francisco’s Hall of Justice and dared police to arrest him, which they did. “I’m starting a campaign to legalize marijuana-smoking,” he declared. A year later, LeMar (short for Legalize Marijuana) was founded (without Eggemeier’s help).

Through numerous interviews with many of the principals involved in early cannabis-law reform efforts, Dufton (pictured above) aptly discusses the origins of the first three separately organized pioneering groups: LeMar and Amorphia, which in short time evolved into the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws (NORML), founded in 1970.

With NORML leading the public charge, Congress formed a commission that recommended decriminalizing marijuana in the 1972 Shafer Report. Despite President Richard Nixon disparaging its findings, 11 states decriminalized pot in the ’70s, starting with Oregon in 1973.

Dufton also correctly acknowledges glaucoma sufferer Robert Randall, who received cannabis from the federal government from 1975 until he died in 2001, as the first bona fide medical-marijuana patient in the U.S. In the ’80s and ’90, a myriad of second-wave reformers like Randall and his organization Alliance for Cannabis Therapeutics pivoted away from advocating primarily for decriminalization in favor of enabling patients’ access to medicinal cannabis.

The election of Ronald Reagan in 1980—who toughened drug-law enforcement on multiple fronts, and, along with his wife, argued that people should “just say no”—put a chill into the legalization movement, but Dufton notes that a 1978 scandal involving NORML and White House drug czar Peter Bourne didn’t help. “The downfall of Peter Bourne and the subsequent downfall of (NORML founder) Keith Stroup brought the country’s first experiment with decriminalization to a close,” she writes.

EXCERPT: “Aided by the experienced marijuana activist Allen St. Pierre, who ran the day-to-day operation of the group, NORML came back to life at the precise time when medical-marijuana laws were beginning to sweep the country, and its insurrection aligned with a renaissance of interest in the drug, heralding a moment that was ripe for the return of marijuana lobbying and activism on a national scale.”

While examining the work of cannabis activists and their strategies over the last six decades, Dufton casts nearly equal light on anti-marijuana groups like the Parents Resource Institute for Drug Education (PRIDE) and the “parents’ movement” of the late ’70s and early ’80s. Government funding kept PRIDE and other similar groups going.

In contrast, cannabis-law reformers relied largely on small donations from hundreds of thousands of stakeholders. That changed in the mid-1990s, when a triumvirate of supportive billionaires (Geroge Soros, Peter Lewis) provided the massive funding necessary for a series of successful state medical-marijuana ballot initiatives from 1996 to 2001.

The passage of California’s Prop 215 in 1996, establishing an individual’s right to use cannabis therapeutically, marked the end of the grass-roots advocacy era in cannabis-law reform. After that, “grasstops” organizations such as the Drug Policy Alliance, the American Civil Liberties Union and the Marijuana Policy Project relied almost entirely on the largesse of a handful of rich donors and family foundations, most of which favored ballot initiatives and litigation over activism and public protests.

Dufton’s Grass Roots is the best non-autobiographical account of the modern effort to reform U.S. cannabis laws. It’s must-read.

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Source: https://www.freedomleaf.com/grass-roots-review-dufton/

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Growing Pains a Month Into California’s Market Launch

Tuesday, January 30, 2018

Honoring Dennis Peron

The medical cannabis community is mourning the death of medical cannabis pioneer Dennis Peron, who died on Saturday at the age of seventy-two. Dennis was the founder of the legendary San Francisco Cannabis Buyers Club in San Francisco and a crusader for the right to safe access to medical cannabis in California. Called the “Father of Medical Marijuana,” he inspired the grassroots movement that adopted Proposition 215 legalizing medical cannabis in California in 1996.

Source: http://www.safeaccessnow.org/honoring_dennis_peron

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Aurora Leads Cannabis Import Race in Italy by Winning (Mostly) Exclusive Rights

10 Treatment Methods to Reduce Mold in Cannabis

Valley delegate introduces bill expanding the uses of medical cannabis oil

By Marina Barnett for WHSV3

Beth Collins, who is a Senior Director of Government Relations and External Affairs at Americans for Safe Access, said cannabis oil was the last option for her daughter, who suffers from epilepsy. She wants this bill to help other patients who are struggling with symptoms to get the help they need as well. The new bill lets doctors make that decision, instead of lawmakers.

"We just don't think that's a good approach for anybody, or fair, so we wanted to let doctors decide and Senator Dunnavant agreed to submit the bill," said Collins.

Source: http://www.safeaccessnow.org/valley_delegate_introduces_bill_expanding_the_uses_of_medical_cannabis_oil

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Study: Marijuana Smoke Exposure Not Linked To Poor Lung Health

Long-term exposure to cannabis smoke is not associated with adverse effects on pulmonary function, according to clinical data published in the journal Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Diseases.

A team of investigators led by researchers at the Colorado School of Public Health assessed the relationship between marijuana use and respiratory function and symptoms in a cohort of 2,300 subjects, many of whom also smoked tobacco.

Authors reported, “Neither current nor former marijuana use was associated with increased risk of cough, wheeze, or chronic bronchitis when compared to never marijuana users after adjusting for covariates. … Current and former marijuana smokers had significantly higher FEV1 (forced expiratory volume) … when compared to never users. … Both current and former marijuana use was associated with significantly less quantitative emphysema … when compared to never users, even after adjusting for age, … current tobacco smoking pack years, and BMI. … In agreement with other published studies, we also did not find that marijuana use was associated with more obstructive lung disease.”

The long-term combined use of tobacco and cannabis also was not found to be associated with any additive adverse effects on the lungs. Authors concluded, “Among older adults with a history of tobacco use, marijuana use does not appear to increase risk for adverse lung function. … There may be no to little increased risk of marijuana use for a further increase in respiratory symptoms or adverse effects on lung function among those with a history of concomitant tobacco use.”

Prior longitudinal studies assessing the effects of long-term cannabis smoke exposure on lung function have similarly reported that subjects’ marijuana use history is not positively associated with increased incidences of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), lung cancer, or with other significant detrimental effects on pulmonary function.

Full text of the study, “Marijuana use associations with pulmonary symptoms and function in tobacco smokers enrolled in the subpopulations and intermediate outcome measures in COPD Study (SPIROMICS),” appears online here.

Source: http://blog.norml.org/2018/01/30/study-marijuana-smoke-exposure-not-linked-to-poor-lung-health/

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First Hand, “First-Timer” Lobby Day Recap

On Sunday, January 21st & Monday the 22nd, NORML members along with non-member cannabis-reform-supporters gathered at the general assembly in Virginia for a Lobby Day. I [Nicole] was among the participants in this specific effort to advocate for marijuana legislative reform. Having lived in Virginia my whole life and being a current constituent of Representative Tim Hugo [R] and Senator David Marsden [D], this definitely felt like my call-to-action. This was my first time lobbying, and I am grateful my introductory experience was in support of sensible cannabis reform, something I so vehemently endorse on a personal level.

Our purpose in gathering was in order to influence, and essentially demand, lawmaker support for HB 1251, and SB 111. These legislative works would legalize medical cannabis oil under physician recommendation [to include all diagnoses, not just intractable epilepsy] as well as decriminalize simple possession charges, respectively.

If you have ever considered joining the marijuana movement, but don’t think you know enough to contribute effectively or even where to begin, never fear! On Sunday I was among numerous fellow supporters in attendance of a conference orchestrated by Virginia NORML’s Executive Director, Jenn Michelle Pedini. There, keynote speakers covered marijuana policy, how to effectively persuade with facts and knowledge regarding marijuana, and went on to take an in-depth look at how prohibition has negatively affected citizens and society. This abundantly informative and motivational colloquium couldn’t have prepared me more to speak with lawmakers and provided great relief to an otherwise intimidating situation. Let’s say hypothetically you have absolutely no interest in lobbying for marijuana reform. Attending the conference portion is still extremely enlightening, and I would recommend it to supporters and prohibitionists alike. A little extra knowledge never hurt anyone, right?

While at the capitol building, I had great conversations with both Rep. Tim Hugo and Sen. David Marsden. Although it was still a bit nerve-racking to be in front of these prestigious figures; I am confident that I was able to effectively communicate the message of necessary marijuana reform in conjunction with the legislation denoted above [greatly due in part to the preparation I received at the conference], and have gained their support on these issues. This has been an experience I will never forget, and I will be sure to seize the chance at every opportunity to do it again in the future. NORML lobby day in any state is the opportunity to affect change and be part of history. Please join us, and we can make it happen together!

Nicole Powell is a current intern at the National NORML office, as well as a current collegiate-level honors student. She has been “saved from a life of opioid drug abuse & dependence due to medical cannabis therapy” [to which she became at serious risk of after a major vehicular accident], in addition to the various other drastic medical benefits cannabis has provided to her after this accident.

Follow Virginia NORML on Facebook, Twitter, and visit their website: http://www.vanorml.org/

Source: http://blog.norml.org/2018/01/30/first-hand-first-timer-lobby-day-recap/

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Exclusive: Coachella Promoter Donated to Anti-Pot Groups

The promoters of the annual Coachella music festival, Anschutz Entertainment Group (AEG), recently announced that cannabis use would not be allowed at the event this April, even though recreational marijuana was legalized in California in 2016 and commercial sales began Jan. 1. The city of Indio, where the festival is held, has banned new pot businesses, but Coachella is on private property. So what gives?

The event’s promoter made the call. “NO Drugs or Drug Paraphernalia, Marijuana, Marijuana products will be allowed,” the Coachella website warns. That’s the rule for camping at Coachella as well.

Anschutz’s History of Contributions to Antidrug Groups

While Coachella’s marijuana ban is standard festival policy, it’s not widely known that AEG founder Philip Anschutz’s private family foundation has donated thousands of dollars to antidrug groups over the last few years, including Kevin Sabet’s Sam Inc. (Smart Approaches to Marijuana) and Smart Colorado.

The Anschutz Foundation’s 2016 tax return.

According to its tax returns, in 2016, the Anschutz Foundation donated $50,000 to SAM Inc., and another $110,000 to its partner organization, Smart Colorado. It gave another $50,000 to Smart Colorado in 2015. The goal was to counter the impact of Amendment 64, the recreational-marijuana legalization initiative the state’s voters passed in 2012.

Proof of Philip Anschutz’s $200 donation to Coloradans Against Legal Marijuana in 2000

This was not the first time Anschutz (pictured above) has funded antidrug groups. In 2000, when the Amendment 20 medical-marijuana initiative was on the Colorado ballot, he made a personal donation of $200 to Coloradans Against Legalizing Marijuana.

Anschutz’s Contributions to CeDAR Drug Treatment Center in Colorado

Also in 2000, the Anschutz Foundation gave the University of Colorado $25 million to build a medical complex in Aurora. The Anschutz Medical Campus is home to the Center for Dependency, Addiction and Rehabilitation (CeDAR). The foundation put up another $3 million for the initial endowment and capital for CeDAR, and continues to be a major donor.

Ben Cort

From 2013-2017, SAM supporter Ben Cort worked at CeDAR. In 2013, Addictionpro.com reported: “Ben Cort started at CeDAR in February, just a few months after having coordinated the campaign against Colorado’s marijuana-legalization initiative that voters approved in November. Cort remains involved in the marijuana policy debate, having become a board member for the Project SAM (Smart Approaches to Marijuana) national organization.”

Cort has worked with SAM for several years and is a director of SAM Action, Sabet’s 501(c)(4) political-nonprofit group. In 2014, he attended a SAM policy summit to strategize against legalization measures in Oregon and Alaska. Cort also traveled to Alaska in 2014 to campaign against the legalization effort there. He left CeDAR last January, but continues to work with Sabet and other legalization opponents.

Christian Hopfer

Also on the campus is Professor Christian Hopfer, a psychiatrist who’s leading a $5.5 million twins study funded by the National Institute on Drug Abuse. It’s comparing twins in Colorado, where pot is legal, with twins in Minnesota, where it’s not. “Some people may benefit,” Hopfer predicts. “But for a subset of people, we suspect there will be adverse consequences.”

In 2013, Hopfer warned that marijuana could damage the brain. “There are a lot of studies showing that there’s an increased risk of severe mental illness,” he stated. “It’s not a big risk, but it does appear that in some vulnerable people marijuana can cause a real, serious mental illness, like a psychotic condition that persists.

Anschutz Has Actually Shown Support for Harm Reduction

The Anschutz Foundation has assets of more than $1 billion; it hands out millions of dollars every year to Colorado-based nonprofits. In contrast to its support for SAM, in 2016, the foundation gave $5,000 to the Harm Reduction Action Center in Denver, which provides services like syringe exchange for people who are homeless or otherwise at risk. Imagine what HARC could have done with the $110,000 that went to Sabet’s groups during the same funding cycle.

Private foundations are basically nonprofits with one sole or primary funder, like the family foundations that underwrite shows on PBS, or drug-policy and criminal-justice-reform efforts. As a private foundation, the Anschutz Foundation can’t engage in any political activity, nor can it make any donations to a 501(c)(4) or political-action committee.

Anschutz’s Conservative Background and Media Holdings

The 78-year-old Anschutz, who lives in Denver, had a net worth of $10.3 billion as of 2015. He owns the right-wing publications Washington Examiner and The Weekly Standard. In the past, he and his foundation have made donations to organizations with anti-LGBT agendas, such as the Family Research Council and Alliance for Defending Freedom. But Anschutz now says, “We’ve immediately ceased all contributions to such groups.”

That’s progress. Now it’s time to pressure Anschutz into curtailing his support for anti-marijuana groups like SAM. If you go to Coachella, a small part of what you pay for a ticket will end up in the pocket of these groups, some of whom tried to stop California’s Prop 64 and Colorado’s Amendment 64 from passing. They may have lost those battles, but at Coachella, the drug war goes on.

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Monday, January 29, 2018

Arguably The Individual Most Responsible For The Rise Of The Medical Marijuana Movement In California, And Eventually Nationwide, Passed Away This Weekend

The individual most responsible for the medical marijuana movement in CA, and eventually in more than 30 states across this country, was San Francisco gay rights and marijuana advocate Dennis Peron, who died this past weekend from lung cancer at age 71.

Peron was drafted and sent to Vietnam in 1966, where he first discovered marijuana. When his tour of duty ended and he returned home, he also managed to bring two pounds of marijuana with him Рstarting a career that he later acknowledged would last more than 40-years. In the 1970s, he opened the Big Top, a caf̩ in San Francisco where marijuana was openly sold and customers could smoke and socialize. The caf̩ was eventually closed by San Francisco police, who arrested Peron on numerous occasions.

Peron was among the earliest marijuana and gay rights advocates to recognize that marijuana could provide relief to HIV-positive and AIDS patients. In 1991 he organized the nation’s first medical marijuana initiative, Proposition P,  approved by 80% of voters of San Francisco. Subsequently, he founded the nation’s first medical marijuana dispensary, the San Francisco Cannabis Buyers’ Club, where patients with HIV and other illnesses could openly buy, use and share marijuana.

The “buyers club” served as many as 11,000 patients before eventually being forced to close by the courts in 1998.

In 1996, with the help of Dale Gieringer and CA NORML, Peron organized the first state initiative to legalize medical marijuana, the Compassionate Use Act (Prop. 215), which went on to be approved by 56% of California voters. The favorable experience with medical marijuana in CA eventually led to the adoption of medical marijuana laws in an additional 29 states and growing.

But Peron’s influence went well beyond the medical use of marijuana. Of the 9 states that have now legalized the recreational use of marijuana by adults, each one has first adopted the medical use of marijuana. Only after the states had grown comfortable with medical use, and had seen first-hand that marijuana was an important medicine that helped tens of thousands of seriously ill Americans, were they willing to move forward to legalize the responsible use of marijuana by adults, regardless of why they smoked.

All of us who smoke marijuana, whether for medical or recreational use, are truly indebted to the courageous early work of Dennis Peron. Without his willingness to stand-up publicly and fight for the medical use of marijuana, despite it’s illegal status at that time, we would not be where we are today.

May he rest in peace

Source: http://blog.norml.org/2018/01/29/arguably-the-individual-most-responsible-for-the-rise-of-the-medical-marijuana-movement-in-california-and-eventually-nationwide-passed-away-this-weekend/

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NACB Releases Packaging and Labeling Standards for Public Review

‘Mary Janes’ Documentary Features the Women of Weed

In a Marin County hotel room, a group of women are giggling, adjusting each other’s hair and posing for selfies. It’s pretty typical, until you hear the dialogue.

“Fuck Facebook!” one says

“Censorship is bullshit!” barks another.

Yes, this is not just any group of women, and this is not just another gathering of friends. We’d all come together to attend the world premiere of Mary Janes: The Women of Weed at the Mill Valley Film Festival on Oct. 8, but we weren’t as happy as we should’ve been, given that we were hours away from our documentary debut.

As pioneers in an industry being reborn outside of prohibition in a society where women are rarely chosen to lead, we’re well seasoned in the ways of hypocrisy and cannabis. Yet, no matter how far we get forging the path to legitimacy, around every turn is a reminder that we can’t put down our machetes just yet.

On this day, our oppressor was Facebook. The social network had refused to allow ads for Mary Janes, because the film’s about marijuana. Let that sink in. The same company that let clandestine agents of the Russian dictatorship buy and use space to create divisiveness during the 2016 Presidential election decided that a documentary about a legal industry violated their terms of service.

Also See: “Mary Janes” Ranked No. 1 Pot-Doc of 2017

If there are two things that get us Mary Janes up in arms, they’re censorship and hypocrisy, and as women in the cannabis industry, we’re intimately familiar with both. The industry’s conscience, spirit guide or even spirit animal, women have played a major role in ushering in the new age of cannabis.

Mary Janes: Women of Weed takes the viewer on a journey of discovery through the eyes of filmmaker Windy Borman (pictured above), who like myself was a child of the Just Say No era in the ’80s. Borman sets out to investigate whether the rhetoric she’d been told about cannabis was accurate or just a fabrication meant to scare her into a drug-free existence.

Borman seeks the answers to these questions by interviewing female industry leaders and those in business, science, medicine and policy. Through her questions and experiences, she uncovers not only the truth about the cannabis plant, but the ways in which female leaders have shaped the industry in the image of the plant herself—strong, diverse, adaptable and with a focus on healing.

But don’t get me wrong, we’re also fierce gatekeepers of truth and protectors of justice, which is why our happy hotel-room reunion was focused on our growing ire at Facebook. We are Mary Janes: The Women of Weed: industry leaders, business developers, researchers, educators and warriors, and a force to be reckoned with.

Check out the schedule for upcoming Mary Janes screenings here.

MARY JANES ROLE CALL

 Here are the 33 “Women of Weed” featured in the movie.

  • Giadha Aguirre de Carcer – founder/CEO, New Frontier Data
  • Betty Aldworth – executive director, Students for Sensible Drug Policy
  • Sarah Batterby – CEO, Hifi Farms
  • Windy Borman – director, Mary Janes: Women of Weed
  • AC Braddock – CEO, Eden Labs
  • Jill Brzezicki – founder/lab director, CMT Labs
  • Juliana Carella – cofounder/CEO, Auntie Dolores and Treatibles
  • Stacia Cosner – deputy director, Students for Sensible Drug Policy
  • Melissa Etheridge – singer/songwriter; owner, Etheridge Farms
  • Sabrina Fendrick – director of government affairs, Berkeley Patients Group
  • Mary Gordon – cofounder, Aunt Zelda’s and Zelda Therapeutics
  • Kiana Hughes – cofounder, Two Dope Chicks
  • Andrea James – founder, National Council for Incarcerated and Formerly Incarcerated Women and Girls
  • Wanda James – CEO, Simply Pure
  • Karen Lazarus – founder, Sweet Mary Jane
  • Jaime Lewis – executive chef, Mountain Medicine; board chair, NCIA
  • Laila Makled – advocacy relations, National Cannabis Festival
  • Leah Maurer – co-owner, The Weed Blog; branding and outreach manager, Yerba Buena
  • Madeline Martinez – board member, NORML
  • Jacqueline McGrane – owner, Cannabinoid Consulting
  • Wendy Mosher – CEO, New West Genetics
  • Jeannie Moss – cofounder/CEO, AnnaBis Style
  • Genifer Murray – founder/CEO, Carbon Blue Consulting; cofounder GENIFER M
  • Karen O’Keefe – director of state policies, Marijuana Policy Project
  • Amanda Reiman – vice president of community relations, Flow Kana
  • Lindsay Robinson – executive director, California Cannabis Industry Association
  • Drayah Sallis – founder, Our Cannabis Culture
  • Dr. Sue Sisley – internal medicine and psychiatry
  • Sabria Still – product specialist, Metropolitan Wellness Center
  • Shaleen Title – commissioner, Massachusetts Cannabis Control Commission
  • Mitzy Vaughan – managing attorney, Greenbridge Corporate Counsel
  • Dr. Daniela Vergara – founder, Agricultural Genomics Foundation
  • Ah Warner – founder/CEO – Cannabis Basics
  • Taylor West – senior communications director, COHNNABIS

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Saturday, January 27, 2018

California Medical-Marijuana Pioneer Dennis Peron Passes Away

After a long battle with lung cancer and COPD, beloved California marijuana activist Dennis Peron passed away today at 2:30 pm PT at the Veteran’s Hospital in San Francisco. He was 71.

Peron founded the medical-marijuana movement in San Francisco nearly three decades ago. Two years after Prop P (which he drafted) passed in San Francisco legalizing medical cannabis in 1991, Peron opened the Cannabis Buyers Club. By 1996, it had 10,000 members and a large storefront on Market St.

Next on Peron’s agenda was to legalize medical use throughout the state. He and California NORML’s Dale Gieringer wrote the first draft of Prop 215, which would pass with 56% of the vote in 1996, making California first state to recognize cannabis’ medical benefits.

Also See: How California Legalized Medical Marijuana

Peron famously theorized that “all marijuana use is medical.” The vague wording of the new law opened the door for all sorts of conditions, from cancer to insomnia, creating a legal gray area that bordered on complete legalization. Over the past 21 years, pretty much any resident who sought a recommendation for medical use received one from a participating doctor.

Also during that time, 29 other states followed California’s lead in legalizing medical use in some form or another. However, when it came time for full recreational legalization (Prop 64), which passed in a 2016 California voter initiative, Peron opposed it.

“Prop 64 is a misrepresentation of what marijuana is primarily for,” he commented at the time. “This kind of legislation will hurt a lot of people, especially small growers and businesses who are trying to provide to their clients but can’t afford to because of the excess regulations and taxation on their products.”

Dennis Peron was born on Apr. 8, 1946 to an Italian-American family in the Bronx, N.Y. and raised on Long Island, N.Y. After a stint in the Army during the Vietnam War, he moved to San Francisco, which was ideal for him since he a was gay man and the city was known to embrace sexual diversity.

By the mid-’70s, Peron was running a large marijuana operation, called The Big Top, out of his Castro St. apartment. Original landrace strains from Mexico and Colombia overflowed in bowls; customer stopped by and filled up bags of cheap but potent grass. Peron had become San Francisco’s Pied Piper of Pot.

He started getting involved in local politics, working for Harvey Milk, who ran for Supervisor several times until he won in 1977. But deranged Supervisor Dan White assassinated Milk, who was also gay and a New York native, along with Mayor George Moscone, 11 months later. Peron, who’s portrayed by Ted Jan Roberts in the movie Milk, was devastated.

After his successes with medical marijuana, Peron moved north of San Francisco, where he grew his own plants. But ultimately he returned to San Francisco and was diagnosed with cancer. Peron died surrounded by his closest friends, who’d held onto hope over the past few years as he grew frailer that he’d be able to overcome the disease. Surely, medical cannabis helped Peron to the very end.

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Friday, January 26, 2018

The Marijuana Justice Act Is the New Normal

Two weeks after Attorney General Jeff Sessions threatened a crackdown on state-sanctioned marijuana programs in January, Rep. Barbara Lee (D-Calif., pictured above), along with 18 cosponsors, introduced the Marijuana Justice Act into the House of Representatives. The bill is the most comprehensive piece of legislation ever introduced to end federal cannabis prohibition, and it also addresses the egregious harms it has wrought, particularly on marginalized communities.

It’s also the first time companion measures to remove marijuana from the Controlled Substances Act have been introduced in both chambers of Congress. The Senate version of the Marijuana Justice Act, introduced in 2017 by Sen. Cory Booker (D-N.J.), provides relief for people either convicted or currently incarcerated for federal cannabis crimes, by creating a national program to expunge their criminal records.

According to the American Civil Liberties Union, African Americans are arrested four times as often as whites for marijuana offenses, although both races consume cannabis at roughly the same rate. One of the ways the Marijuana Justice Act would work to reverse this disparity is by monitoring the states that choose not to legalize cannabis. If any state does not reduce the racial disparity in pot-arrest rates, it would lose various federal funding streams, including for prison construction.

The bill would also allow all federal inmates serving time for sales and possession of marijuana to petition the courts for resentencing. Though this would affect only the relatively small number of individuals in federal prison, it would set a national precedent on how to deal with nonviolent marijuana offenders in local and state correctional facilities, as would the expungement program.

“In the wake of Attorney General Sessions’ decision to rescind the Cole memo, it’s clear that the Trump Administration is doubling down on unjust marijuana-criminalization policies,” Rep. Lee commented on Jan. 17. “Now, it’s up to Congress to end federal marijuana prohibition and help the victims of the failed War on Drugs rebuild their lives. The Marijuana Justice Act is a bold proposal to reverse decades of discriminatory drug enforcement and to bring federal marijuana policy in line with the wishes of the American people.”

Send a message to your federal lawmakers in support of the Marijuana Justice Act as well as other pending legislation here.

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Review: The War on Drugs’ ‘A Deeper Understanding’

Every generation needs its guitar hero, and unassuming frontman Adam Granduciel sets out to claim that mantle on The War on Drugs’ fourth album and major-label debut, A Deeper Understandinga title that almost begs you to don the headphones and, well, “get into it.”

The Philadelphia-by-way-of-Oakland sextet originally sported fellow garage-band uberhero Kurt Vile, but this is now Granduciel’s baby. His glistening solos stud each of the 10 songs, all but one clocking in at over five and a half minutes. At the album’s center is the epic 11-minute-plus masterpiece, “Thinking of a Place,” its “An Ocean in Between the Waves” (from 2014’s Lost in the Dream). It recalls the heyday of Haight-Ashbury psychedelic shamans like the Grateful Dead or Quicksilver Messenger Service in its depiction of a self-referential sonic universe: “And it feels so very real/Oh, it was so full of love.”

The War on Drugs’ clever name is not intended as a comment on Richard Nixon’s ill-fated campaign, but an open-ended moniker that allows the band to defy categorization and float in the nether region between country, folk, rock and prog, gently cascading in songs like the opening “Up All Night” and the single, “Holding On,” with its video of death, rebirth and transcendence in a story of a man who loses a loved one, only to discover their spirit in a frolicking pony. “I keep moving to changes,” sings Granduciel, echoing the music’s supple nature, “heart or hope.”

Upon first listen, the album floats like some chiming, languid Mark Knopfler guitar solo, but the more you delve into it, the deeper the understanding. The War on Drugs has apparently taken advantage of having a major-label budget to craft, hone and polish the album to an acid-soaked shine, giving listeners any number of aural rabbit holes to explore.

Like “Holding On,” “Strangest Thing” also wonders about overstaying one’s welcome. “Am I just living in the space between/the beauty and the pain?” Granduciel asks in a Dylanesque plaint, as Anthony LaMarca’s slide guitar merges with the emotion of the lyrics and runs with it.

“Knocked Down” is delivered in muted tones, Granduciel dreaming of making it rain and “diamonds in the night sky… I’m like a child all alone, beaten up, free,” before the pace picks up on the Dire Straits-ish “Nothing to Find,” another song about the primal elements, in this case, fire and rain. “Oh, it always changes, I don’t understand/I keep moving through the edge and now/Comes a feeling I can’t stop/Emotionless and dead,” he sings as his jangling guitar and a swirling E Street Band-like organ spark a resurrection.

“In Chains” reiterates the album’s themes of freedom and captivity, love and loss, “gettin’ in the middle/and shining every light upon it.” Here’s where those “next Springsteen” comparisons begin to make sense, evoking Tunnel of Love-era Boss. You can also hear the mournful tone of Neil Young on the lovelorn “Clean Living,” a song that evokes After the Gold Rush as Granduciel persists, “I ain’t giving in/I know my way around it.”

The closing “You Don’t Have to Go” builds from heartache and longing to ecstatic guitar release before fading to black as Granduciel intones, “I can feel the change/Winds of love blow few/And they move through me/And they blow through you/And take you into the night…”

In a world of electronic music and superstar DJs who don’t play a note except on their laptops, is there still room for The War on Drugs’ traditional guitar/bass/drums approach, particularly one that so clearly acknowledges its debt to what came before them? With ’80s synths, metronomic drums and lush atmosphere, A Deeper Understanding rewards repeat listening. It’s the kind of album that should be listened to on vinyl, as you pore over the liner notes, clean your weed on its gatefold cover, roll one up and immerse yourself in Adam Granduciel’s soundscapes of the mind.

A Deeper Understanding has been nominated for a Grammy in the Best Rock Album category. The awards will be handed out on Jan. 28 on CBS.

THE WAR ON DRUGS DISCOGRAPHY

2008 – Barrel of Batteries (EP)

2008 – Wagonwheel Blues

2010 – Future Weather (EP)

2011 – Slave Ambient

2014 – Lost in the Dream

2017 – A Deeper Understanding

THE WAR ON DRUGS LINE-UP

Adam Granduciel – vocals, guitar, harmonica

Anthony LaMarca – guitar

Robbie Bennett – keyboards

David Hartley – bass

Charlie Hall – drums

John Natchez – saxophone

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Source: https://www.freedomleaf.com/war-on-drugs-album-review/

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Thursday, January 25, 2018

54 Senators And Representatives To President Trump: Don’t Let Sessions Break Your Marijuana Promise

On Wednesday, January 24th, fifty-four members of Congress representing both political parties sent a letter to President Trump denouncing the recent rescinding of the Cole Memo by Attorney General Jeff Sessions.

Led by Senator Elizabeth Warren on the Senate side and Representative Jared Polis in the House, the signers stated:

“These new policies have helped eliminate the black market sale of marijuana and allowed law enforcement to focus on real threats to public health and safety. This action by the Department of Justice has the potential to unravel efforts to build sensible drug policies that encourage economic development as we finally move away from antiquated practices that have hurt disadvantaged communities.”

The Cole Memo was a Justice Department memorandum, authored by former US Deputy Attorney General James Cole in 2013 to US attorneys in all 50 states, directs prosecutors not to interfere with state legalization efforts and those licensed to engage in the plant’s production and sale, provided that such persons do not engage in marijuana sales to minors or divert the product to states that have not legalized its use, among other guidelines.

The signers further pointed out the during the course of the 2016 presidential campaign, then-candidate Donald Trump declared that “we should leave (marijuana) up to the states.” You can read the full letter by clicking here.

At a time when the majority of states now are regulating marijuana use in some form, and when nearly two-thirds of voters endorse legalizing the plant’s use by adults, it makes no sense from a political, fiscal, or moral perspective for Attorney General Sessions to take this step.

It is great to see leaders like Senator Warren and Representatives Polis, Blumenauer, and others step up to demand action to comport federal law with majority public opinion and to end the needless criminalization of marijuana — a policy failure that encroaches upon civil liberties, engenders disrespect for the law, and disproportionately impacts communities of color.”

Should the Trump administration go through with a crackdown on states that have legalized marijuana, they will be taking billions of dollars away from regulated, state-sanctioned businesses and putting that money back into the hands of drug cartels.

Send a message to your elected officials to speak out against AG Sessions. 

Source: http://blog.norml.org/2018/01/25/54-senators-and-representatives-to-president-trump-dont-let-sessions-break-your-marijuana-promise/

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Vermont’s Legalization-Lite Shouldn’t Be the Model for Other States

Let’s be clear. The national headlines are incorrect. Vermont did not actually legalize cannabis this month. The Green Mountain State only enhanced its current decriminalization laws.

The on legislation signed on Jan. 22 by Republican Gov. Phil Scott (pictured above) improves the state’s law from decriminalization (where an ounce of cannabis drew a $200 fine for an adult, and personal cultivation was allowed only for medical purposes) to depenalization, where adults can legally possess an ounce, and can cultivate up to four cannabis plants. While it’s a historic first—the first law permitting possession of cannabis to be enacted by a state legislature instead of by voters—it does not allow a legal marketplace with taxes, licensing and consumer protections. That leaves the door open to the continued existence of a black market with arrests, prosecutions and incarceration.

The eight states that have actually legalized cannabis since 2012, creating a legal and regulated industry, are Alaska, California, Colorado, Maine, Massachusetts, Nevada, Oregon and Washington. That Vermont’s law came through the legislature rather than by ballot initiative explains its conservative nature; Gov. Scott was reluctant to sign it. The legislation does create a commission that will review whether and how the state would adopt tax-and-regulate cannabis policies in the near future.

The Vermont law still flies directly into the face of a hostile Department of Justice that recently rescinded previous federal memos allowing states the autonomy to largely formulate their own progressive cannabis commerce laws. Indeed, Vermont’s moxie in the face of the Feds is the real good news.

Ever better news is that New Jersey has become the next state to move toward ending marijuana prohibition. Its new governor, Democrat Phil Murphy, specifically advocating that the state legalize cannabis in a manner similar to Colorado. A proposed legalization bill is currently being debated in Trenton. Its impact would be much more than that of Vermont’s depenalization, because of the Garden State’s far larger population, massive economy, and proximity to New York and Philadelphia.

If New Jersey legalizes cannabis commerce, the states bordering it, New York, Pennsylvania, and Delaware, would predictably be pressured to enact similar reforms. In fact, in his State of the State speech on Jan. 16, Democratic New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo said he plans to to appoint a panel to look into legalization. New York is already facing similar pressure from Massachusetts and Canada gearing up for recreational sales in 2018, despite’s Cuomo’s insistence that marijuana is a gateway to hard drugs like heroin.

Unlike the take-the-low-road legislative rush of mainly conservative and Southern states that have adopted CBD-only laws rather than full-blown medical access to cannabis, states that want to fully benefit from legalization should adopt the New Jersey’s proposed model rather than Vermont’s historic but insufficient legalization-lite.

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The post Vermont’s Legalization-Lite Shouldn’t Be the Model for Other States appeared first on Freedom Leaf.

Source: https://www.freedomleaf.com/vermont-legalization-lite/

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