Club Drugs
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161US TN: OPED: Bill Would Focus On Drug Abuse TreatmentSun, 24 Apr 2016
Source:Tennessean, The (Nashville, TN) Author:Mauney, Rusty Area:Tennessee Lines:Excerpt Added:04/24/2016

H.R. 4378 Addresses the Need to Provide Treatment Facilities for Those Already Bound by Addiction.

Education and Prevention Are Imperative in Fighting the Epidemic, but Don't Work by Themselves. the Economic Advantage of Treating Addicts Is Huge, When Factoring in Health Care and Judicial Costs.

Since Nancy Reagan first spoke the familiar words "Just say no" in 1982, this country has been engaged in a war on drugs that to some seems unwinnable. There is currently a piece of legislation in Congress that takes a different approach to the matter. Rather than solely focusing on prevention of substance abuse, the Access to Substance Abuse Treatment Act of 2016 (H.R. 4378) addresses the overwhelming need to provide treatment facilities for those already bound by the chains of addiction to heroin, cocaine, methamphetamine, 3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA, ecstasy) and phencyclidine (PCP).

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162US WI: Sanders Not Blowing Smoke About PotFri, 22 Apr 2016
Source:Milwaukee Journal Sentinel (WI) Author:Kertscher, Tom Area:Wisconsin Lines:Excerpt Added:04/23/2016

Campaigning for president in the liberal oasis of Madison, U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont rose to the defense of marijuana.

Critical of the nation's war on drugs, Sanders said the lives of millions of Americans have been "ruined" because they got a police record for possessing marijuana.

"Today, under the federal Controlled Substance Act, marijuana is listed in the same Schedule I as heroin. That is nuts," Sanders declared March 26, 10 days before he defeated Hillary Clinton in Wisconsin's Democratic primary.

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163 US NY: Illicit Drugs Pose Global ProblemWed, 20 Apr 2016
Source:Los Angeles Times (CA) Author:Simmons, Ann M. Area:New York Lines:117 Added:04/21/2016

Consumers Number About 246 Million, With the U.S. Leading the Way and Cannabis the Top Narcotic.

As leaders from around the world gather in New York for what many are calling the most important summit on illegal drugs in two decades, one thing is clear: The world has a serious drug problem.

Worldwide, about 246 million people use illicit drugs, and 1 in 10 of these users suffer from disorders related to drug use. Of the estimated 12 million people who inject drugs, at least 1.6 million are also living with HIV, while slightly more than half suffer from hepatitis C. Each year, 200,000 people suffer drug-related deaths, such as overdoses.

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164 US CA: Investors Pour Millions into Northern CaliforniaWed, 20 Apr 2016
Source:Press Democrat, The (Santa Rosa, CA) Author:Kovner, Guy Area:California Lines:155 Added:04/20/2016

As millions of marijuana aficionados light up Wednesday at 4:20 p.m. in celebration of "Weed Day," many are blissfully unaware of the increasing interest that investors with deep pockets are showing in their favorite psychoactive herb.

A green rush is on in the marijuana industry, with legal sales of cannabis rising by a billion dollars or more each year nationwide, according to one report, and venture capitalists pouring millions into marijuana enterprises ranging from computer software and social networks to storage bags, vaporizers and insurance.

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165 US MI: Tommy Chong: The King Of GreenWed, 13 Apr 2016
Source:Metro Times (Detroit, MI) Author:Blitchok, Dustin Area:Michigan Lines:179 Added:04/14/2016

The Iconic Stoner Chats With Us About Detroit, Cancer, and Donald Trump

It's a Friday morning, and Tommy Chong is about to ride up John R in a replica of The Love Machine, the 1964 Chevy Impala from Up in Smoke. He has one hand on the chain link steering wheel and what Cheech Marin might call a Led Zeppelin-sized joint in the other.

When asked if he wants to blaze, though, the most iconic of stoners declines. "It's still Michigan," he says.

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166 CN BC: Narcan On Heaven's Door: How To Save A LifeThu, 07 Apr 2016
Source:Now, The (Surrey, CN BC) Author:Reid, Amy Area:British Columbia Lines:230 Added:04/11/2016

Holding the addict's hand as he overdosed isn't what hit Erin Schulte the hardest.

It was the way he smelled.

"I remember looking at him and thinking he was so 'normal.' Clean cut. I smelled his cologne. No scabs or wounds. Nice clothing. I just remember how he smelled and remember thinking, 'Why does this guy feel the need to get so high he leaves this planet?'"

She sat on the ground with him, rubbing his hand. She told him to come back and not to stop breathing.

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167 US DC: Pot Activists See Win As Opportunity For DialogueMon, 04 Apr 2016
Source:Washington Times (DC) Author:McDermott, Ryan Area:District of Columbia Lines:115 Added:04/04/2016

Rally Pressures Obama to Deschedule Marijuana

The local activists who helped legalize marijuana possession in the District were on the trail of bigger game Saturday, lighting up in front of the White House to protest the way federal laws classify the drug.

"This is about needless incarceration," Dave Anderson said as he walked along a 51-foot inflatable joint that protesters planned to march from 15th Street NW and Pennsylvania Avenue NW to the gates outside of the north lawn of the White House. "We've got local momentum in D.C., so this is an opportunity for a dialogue."

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168 US DC: White House Target Of Pot-Law ProtestSun, 03 Apr 2016
Source:Washington Post (DC) Author:Cox, John Woodrow Area:District of Columbia Lines:50 Added:04/03/2016

The mass of protesters gathered outside the White House couldn't quite wait for 4:20 Saturday afternoon, the pre-planned time they had designated to light their marijuana-packed joints and pipes in protest of the federal laws that prohibit the drug's consumption.

Just past 4: 17, plumes of smoke arose from the crowd of more than 100 people, which was surrounded by officers from the U. S. Park Police, Metropolitan Police and the Secret Service. Still, because the activists remained on the street - owned by the District, which has legalized pot possession- and off the sidewalks-owned by the federal government, which has not - no one was arrested. Just two people were given citations and $25 fines for public consumption. A man who knew the pair said they were confronted by police only after a member of their group accidentally blew smoke in an officer's face.

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169 US DC: Strong Religious Beliefs Linked to Lower Rates of DrugMon, 04 Apr 2016
Source:Washington Times (DC) Author:Richardson, Bradford Area:District of Columbia Lines:95 Added:04/02/2016

For a religion in which wine plays such a central role, Christianity may prove surprisingly effective at curbing drug use, according to a study.

Data analyzed by DrugAbuse.com in "Drugs and Devotion: Comparing Substance Abuse by Believers and Nonbelievers" show a correlation between religious belief and a reluctance to experiment with narcotics.

Americans who said they are not religious are more likely to have used a host of recreational drugs, ranging from marijuana and alcohol to Ecstasy and heroin. Nonbelievers in the study, for instance, were 12 times more likely to use LSD and more than four times as likely as than their religious counterparts to try cocaine in the past year.

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170 US DC: Mass Smoke-In Planned By Marijuana ActivistsThu, 31 Mar 2016
Source:Washington Post (DC) Author:Davis, Aaron C. Area:District of Columbia Lines:148 Added:03/31/2016

Supporters of Legalization Risk Arrest for Lighting Up Outside the White House

Attention senior class-trip chaperones, cherry blossom lovers, and anyone else who may wander by the White House on Saturday: Brace yourself for a cloud of marijuana smoke - and, possibly, mass arrests.

Organizers of the successful ballot measure that legalized pot last year in the District say they have had enough with President Obama's slog toward loosening marijuana laws. To protest, they are planning what they promise will be the first large-scale display of public pot smoking in the nation's capital, with the intention of getting arrested.

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171 CN ON: Edu: A Look Into Brockas Drug CultureTue, 29 Mar 2016
Source:Brock Press, The (CN ON Edu) Author:Blasiak, Nicholas Area:Ontario Lines:129 Added:03/30/2016

While it would appear that drug use is a prominent feature of student life, quantitatively, it seems that drug use is actually decreasing at university campuses as well as Brock University specifically. According to Campus Security, there have been approximately 87 instances of controlled drug and substance abuse infractions in 2015, which has decreased considerably from 2014 (126 infractions) and 2013 (100 infractions).

"The drugs and or drug calls that we respond to on campus generally involve marijuana. We have also come across cocaine, ecstasy, prescription drugs, however, these are very few incidents that we are aware of," said Donna Moody, director of Brock University Campus Security Services.

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172CN BC: Drug Smorgasbord Suit Aims To Curb Impaired DrivingFri, 25 Mar 2016
Source:Vancouver Sun (CN BC) Author:Lindsay, Bethany Area:British Columbia Lines:Excerpt Added:03/26/2016

Being simultaneously high on pot, cocaine, heroin, MDMA and LSD is never a good combination, but the Ford Motor Company wants you to know that it's particularly bad if you plan to get behind the wheel.

That's the idea behind the automaker's new "drugged driving suit," an elaborate collection of weights, bandages, goggles and noisemakers that claims to simulate the physical effects of taking a variety of drugs.

Ford will be rolling the suit out this year as part of its Driving Skills for Life classes, asking new drivers to navigate a driving course while pretending to be blissed out on an improbable cocktail of illegal substances.

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173US CA: Editorial: Let Pot Businesses Take It To The BankFri, 25 Mar 2016
Source:Orange County Register, The (CA)          Area:California Lines:Excerpt Added:03/25/2016

In a recent report, the Register's pot reporter, Brooke Edwards Staggs, wrote on the different ways the growing legal marijuana industry is navigating the complex and conflicting mix of state and federal law especially when it comes to money, that most necessary asset of any successful business.

"Even with checks and balances, [Chris Francy, director of the OC3 dispensary in Santa Ana] said, operating in cash makes businesses vulnerable to internal theft. They struggle with simple transactions like paying workers and bills," the Register reported. "The state Board of Equalization says some dispensaries have settled tax bills with duffel bags stuffed with up to $150,000."

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174 CN ON: Reporter Learns Risk Of 'Drugged Driving'Fri, 18 Mar 2016
Source:Metro (Ottawa, CN ON) Author:Lofaro, Joe Area:Ontario Lines:51 Added:03/22/2016

It's not surprising that feeling supremely stoned in front of two uniformed police officers is a truly embarrassing feeling.

Yet that's exactly how I felt Thursday when Ottawa Police Const. TJ Jellinek was instructing me to walk toe-to-toe in a straight line while counting out loud at the Shaw Centre.

Ottawa police officers were at the Ottawa-Gatineau International Auto Show to give live demonstrations of a drugged driving simulation suit designed by Ford to show what it's like to operate a vehicle while impaired by cannabis, LSD, cocaine, ecstasy, or heroin.

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175US MN: Review: 'Narconomics' Addresses the Business End of theSun, 20 Mar 2016
Source:Minneapolis Star-Tribune (MN)          Area:Minnesota Lines:Excerpt Added:03/20/2016

Narconomics: How to Run a Drug Cartel

Tom Wainwright, PublicAffairs, 278 pages, $26.99.

In "Narconomics," Tom Wainwright of the Economist brings a fine and balanced analytical mind to some very good research, undertaken largely in northern Mexico. By looking at the drug trade as a business, Wainwright is able to reveal much about why it wreaks such havoc in Central and South America. The issue of violence is not a random by-product of gangster culture. It is central to the industry, Wainwright observes, as the only way "to enforce contractual agreements." To control or police a market like drugs, the cartel must be able to wield decisive violence or, at the very least, be able to project a credible threat of violence.

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176 UK: Urinals Are New Battleground In Britain's War On DrugsFri, 18 Mar 2016
Source:Independent (UK) Author:Milmo, Cahal Area:United Kingdom Lines:77 Added:03/18/2016

Samples Collected at Nightclubs Can Provide Data on Which Substances Are Being Used and Where

For decades, the war on drugs has been fought on fronts from the jungles of Latin America to the classroom. But now the struggle to understand the use of illegal substances has reached a new low - the nation's urinals.

Scientists in charge of tracking drug use across Europe, in particular the booming use of so-called "legal highs", have put forward proposals to use samples from urinals in locations such as nightclubs and music festivals to try to work out which illicit substances are being consumed.

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177 US CA: Column: Halting Cannabis's Eviction CrisisThu, 17 Mar 2016
Source:SF Weekly (CA) Author:Roberts, Chris Area:California Lines:130 Added:03/17/2016

Eleven years is a lifetime in technology, real estate, and the California cannabis industry. But to find a taste of 2005 in 2016 San Francisco, all you have to do is head south on Mission Street past Cesar Chavez - do not be afraid, Valencia Street ends, yet the city continues - and pull up on the narrow block of 29th Street that connects Mission to San Jose Avenue.

Here, after you're buzzed in past a mirror-glassed door, a handful of people - some old, some crippled, some indigent - can be found lounging on well-worn couches. There are black-light posters on the walls, and New Orleans jazz wafts softly through air heavy with the sweet smell of cannabis from the counter at one end of the room. It's run-down, it's homey, it's comfortable. It's very, very chill.

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178 UK: Column: Lib Dems Call For Drugs ReformThu, 10 Mar 2016
Source:Birmingham Post (UK) Author:Walker, Jonathan Area:United Kingdom Lines:130 Added:03/11/2016

LIBERAL Democrats say there's a case for setting up cannabis shops allowing people to buy the drug in their local high street.

But how many people in the West Midlands take cannabis or other drugs - - and is drug use rising or falling?

Here's what the official figures tell us about drug use in the West Midlands.

In the West Midlands, 6.9 per cent of the population aged 16 to 59 say they have taken cannabis at least once last year. That's about one in 15 people. It's about the same as the national average.

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179 Australia: Editorial: End Polarising Stand-Off and Trial PillSun, 06 Mar 2016
Source:Sun-Herald (Australia)          Area:Australia Lines:70 Added:03/07/2016

No one wants another summer of deaths at music festivals. Not the organisers, the health experts, the government, the festival-goers. Nor the parents left to wonder and worry when their children go to these events.

But how to prevent it? The best efforts of police, teams of sniffer dogs and the threat of arrest have failed to make a dent in Australia's love affair with "party drugs". We are many years into the relationship and use has not decreased. Meanwhile, the potency of ecstasy has shot up and new psychoactive substances are coming onto the market, increasing the risks for those taking illicit substances and making it harder for medical personnel to work out the best treatment for sufferers.

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180 Australia: Editorial: An Attitude From The Nixon ArkSat, 05 Mar 2016
Source:Canberra Times (Australia)          Area:Australia Lines:93 Added:03/07/2016

Of all the conflicts that the United States embarked upon in the past 100 years, President Richard Nixon's war on drugs - launched in June 1971 - was arguably the most futile.

The aim was to reduce the illegal trade in drugs by criminalising their production, sale, possession and consumption. An army law enforcement agency equipped with all the resources the most prosperous and technologically advanced nation on earth could muster was enlisted to reinforce this prohibition.

However, for all the national treasure expended and the millions of lives lost or blighted, the war has achieved little. Estimates of the size of the US' illicit drug trade are far from precise, but it's estimated that users spend about $100 billion annually, sustaining and enriching large criminal organisations inside and outside the country.

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