![]() |
|
|||||||
| CLC Musicbox | Register | All Albums | FAQ | Members List | Calendar | Casino | Gameroom [0] | Arcade | Search | Today's Posts | Mark Forums Read | Chat Room |
| News and Current Events Post up the latest news |
![]() |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
|
|
#1
|
||||
|
||||
|
June 15th, 2009 By: Paul Armentano, NORML Deputy Director They say that every action spurs an opposite reaction. Well, that certainly seems to be the case in Congress.
Just days after Massachusetts Democrat Rep. Barney Frank, along with 13 cosponsors, reintroduced HR 2835, the Medical Marijuana Patient Protection Act of 2009 in Congress, Republican Rep. Mark Kirk (Illinois) has called for federal legislation to sentence certain first-time marijuana offenders to up to 25 years in prison. UPDATE!!! UPDATE!!! It gets even worse. Check out some of the comments and coverage from Rep. Kirk’s press conference (WTF is “koosh?!”), which took place this afternoon. You can also offer your opinions regarding this misguided and mean-spirited proposal on Alternet.org and the ever-popular Huffington Post blog. You can also send Rep. Kirk and his colleagues a strong message by making your thoughts known on The Hill.com’s Congress blog here. U.S. Rep. Mark Kirk to push tougher sentences for more-potent marijuanaOkay, where to begin? Well, we can start with U.S. Representative Mark Kirk. According to the Congressman’s website, Rep. Kirk is “pro-personal responsibility.” Unless, of course, we’re talking about allowing responsible adults (or patients) the choice to relax (or medicate) in the privacy of their own homes with a substance that is objectively safer than alcohol (or most prescription pharmaceuticals). Then, naturally, all bets are off. Representative Kirk’s website also alleges that the five-time-elected Congressman is “pro-science.” Unless, of course, we’re talking about cannabis — in which case he is actually “pro-ideology” and “anti-science.” After all, if Rep. Kirk was truly interested in the science of cannabis he would already know that: 1) According to a 2008 review (see page 12) of marijuana potency by the University of Mississippi, the average THC in domestically grown marijuana — which comprises the bulk of the U.S. market — is less than five percent, a figure that’s remained unchanged for nearly a decade. 2) THC — regardless of potency — is virtually non-toxic to healthy cells or organs, and is incapable of causing a fatal overdose. Currently, doctors may legally prescribe a FDA-approved pill that contains 100 percent THC, and curiously, nobody among Rep. Kirk’s staff or at the Lake County Sheriff’s office seems to be overly concerned about its potential health effects. 3) Survey data gleaned from cannabis consumers in the Netherlands—where users may legally purchase pot of known quality—indicates that most cannabis consumers prefer less potent pot, just as the majority of those who drink alcohol prefer beer or wine rather than 190 proof Everclear or Bacardi 151. When consumers encounter unusually strong varieties of marijuana, they adjust their use accordingly and smoke less. Of course, if Rep. Kirk (write him here!) was really concerned about potential risks posed by supposedly stronger marijuana, he would support regulating the sale of drug (as opposed to jailing first-time pot sellers for a quarter of a century) so that its potency would be consistent and this information would be publicly displayed to the consumer. This same advice applies to the members of the Lake County Sheriff’s Department and the Waukegan Police Department — who claim “we don’t make the laws; we just enforce them” — yet seem to have no problem whatsoever lobbying for increased federal pot penalties while on company time. Fortunately, the likelihood is that Rep. Kirk’s proposed legislation will be all bark and no bite. One, I suspect that few if any of Rep. Kirk’s colleagues in Congress will even consider supporting such an asinine measure. Two, even if such legislation were to become law (and it won’t) — who would test each and every seized marijuana sample for THC potency and who would pay for it? Currently, only the University of Mississippi engages in such potency testing, which is highly expensive and requires the use of a gas chromatography mass spectrometer device. In short, it appears that the misguided Congressman from Illinois is simply trying to make headlines. One can’t blame him for trying. After all, across the pond, unsubstantiated claims regarding the dangers of often-talked-about-but-never-actually-defined supposedly “lethal” ’skunk’ weed caused a national frenzy and resulted in Parliament hastily deciding to reclassify pot possession offenses from a verbal warning to up to five years in jail. Never mind that, under Britain’s short-lived experiment with decriminalization, marijuana potency actually fell — as did the number of adolescents using the drug. Of course, as the latest actions of the so-called “pro-science, pro-personal liberty” Congressman show, facts play virtually no role in political drug policy debate, and ignorance hardly disqualifies someone from holding elected office. |
|
#2
|
||||
|
||||
|
So basically this idiot wants to imprison us for growing high grade, while joeblow is out there dealing mexibrick that people/leo are dying for. It'll never pass but damn what a fucking tool.
oh edit! and not the joeblow who used to hang out on the boards!!! |
|
#3
|
||||
|
||||
|
Hahaa, Joe blow
There on there way to getting this similar thing to happen in Canada right now. Its amazing cause almost every study our there and the common school of thought is that mandatory minimums don't work. This dude is either trying to make a name for him self or he had a house overlooking 3mi island in the 80's.
__________________
|
|
#4
|
||||
|
||||
|
So it's like doing more jail time on a DUI for drinking whiskey instead of beer...
Makes total sense to me. Fucking republicans!
__________________
HOLYBEANS.COM BATMAN!! |
|
#5
|
||||
|
||||
|
LOL... yeah, it's stupid as fuck alright - workin with patients in the hospitals, most of what I saw were diseases related to alcohol - i.e. diabetes mellitus, kidney failure, liver failure, and DEATH. Not once have I seen a pot related illness! You can't blame all this on the republicans though - ALL politicians are sensationalist, headline grabbing, power hungry tools! They only get power by taking it from US...
__________________
|
|
#6
|
||||
|
||||
|
Everyone who knows me knows that I do not advocate violence, nor do I recommend that anyone do anything illegal. That being said, I would not lose one wink of sleep if someone were to walk into that son of a bitches office and work his ass over with a Lousiville Slugger.
__________________
For Technical support: Press and hold the Alt & F4 keys on your keyboard |
|
#7
|
||||
|
||||
|
Quote:
__________________
HOLYBEANS.COM BATMAN!! |
|
#8
|
||||
|
||||
|
Quote:
|
![]() |
| Bookmarks |
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads
|
||||
| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
| Lake County pot grower sentenced to 10 years in prison | Mountaineer | News and Current Events | 12 | 07-10-2009 07:49 am |
| Mandatory prison sentences for drug crimes | WildFire.ca | News and Current Events | 8 | 02-28-2009 08:06 am |
| new years resolutions | gribb | CLC Lounge | 25 | 01-03-2009 07:36 am |
| UK: Radio 1 DJ jailed for four years in Dubai on cannabis charge | Mountaineer | News and Current Events | 3 | 02-26-2008 12:20 am |
| marc emery plea deal ...... 5 years | redeyed | News and Current Events | 33 | 01-21-2008 05:39 pm |