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21 US TX: PUB LTE: Make Marijuana SenseWed, 06 Aug 2014
Source:Houston Chronicle (TX) Author:Sharpe, Robert Area:Texas Lines:36 Added:08/07/2014

Regarding "End prohibition" (Page B6, Saturday), thank you for calling for an end to marijuana prohibition in your editorial. Mexican drug cartels are no doubt thrilled with our federal government's insistence that marijuana remain illegal. If the goal of marijuana prohibition is to subsidize violent drug cartels, prohibition is a grand success.

The drug war distorts supply-and-demand dynamics so that big money grows on little trees. If the goal is to deter use, marijuana prohibition is a catastrophic failure. The United States has almost double the rate of marijuana use as the Netherlands where marijuana is legal. The criminalization of Americans who prefer marijuana to martinis has no basis in science.

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22 US TX: PUB LTE: Just Sell ItMon, 04 Aug 2014
Source:Houston Chronicle (TX) Author:Sieckmann, Bob Area:Texas Lines:21 Added:08/06/2014

Regarding "Marijuana find no surprise to Polk County residents" (Page B1, Wednesday), if Polk County or the state has any problem getting rid of the pot they are pulling up, I have a suggestion: Sell it to Colorado or to the state of Washington. Texas could certainly use the couple million dollars it would bring.

Bob Sieckmann, Trinity

[end]

23US TX: Editorial: For Sane Drug LawsSun, 03 Aug 2014
Source:Dallas Morning News (TX)          Area:Texas Lines:Excerpt Added:08/04/2014

Texans Need to Know Where Candidates Stand on Pot

The Marijuana Policy Project advocacy group, spearhead for national pot reforms, has hired a full-time political director in Texas to focus on changing laws here. The organization has also hired a lobbyist to work the state Capitol.

The idea that conservative, law-and-order Texas is ripe for change might have been ridiculed in the not-too-distant past.

Things are moving fast, though, as it becomes clearer that the public is fed up with needless casualties and wasted money from the nation's decades of waging war against weed. Even in Texas, people are fed up.

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24US TX: Editorial: End ProhibitionFri, 01 Aug 2014
Source:Houston Chronicle (TX)          Area:Texas Lines:Excerpt Added:08/03/2014

With calls for change coming from across the spectrum, let states dictate marijuana laws.

We always knew that marijuana altered the human brain, but it must be more powerful than we thought if it has the famously liberal New York Times editorial board in agreement with Gov. Rick Perry.

In a recent editorial, the collective voice of the Grey Lady echoed a sentiment that Perry expressed last year at World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland: Marijuana laws should be dictated by the states, not the federal government. It is a position that this board has reiterated over the past several years.

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25 US TX: PUB LTE: Speaking Of CannabisThu, 31 Jul 2014
Source:Houston Chronicle (TX) Author:Elam, Jack Area:Texas Lines:37 Added:08/03/2014

Regarding "Marijuana isn't necessarily safe to treat what ails us" (Page B13, Sunday), before David Murray, the senior fellow in the Center for Substance Abuse Policy Research, condemns using marijuana medically, he should ask, "What is marijuana?" The federal definition of "marihuana" is over 100 words long, but does not mention either THC, CBD or smoke.

He should know that there has been a bait-and-switch to advance a political agenda. It occurred about 44 years ago, when that definition was enacted into law, then temporarily placed into Schedule 1, thus precluding the studies he requires for validation.

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26 US TX: PUB LTE: Discrimination and Drug Ex-ConsSat, 02 Aug 2014
Source:Dallas Morning News (TX) Author:Wills, Suzanne Area:Texas Lines:49 Added:08/03/2014

Re: =93Lower Sentences for Drugs =AD Commission right to offer reduced penalty,=94 Monday Editorials.

For the 50-year period spanning the 1920s to early 1970s, there were about 110 state and federal prisoners per 100,000 in the United States.

In 1973, President Richard Nixon created the Drug Enforcement Administration by executive order, thereby ushering in the modern war on drugs. State and federal prisoners now number about 700 per 100,000.

After release, these prisoners can be legally discriminated against for the rest of their lives. They can be refused employment, housing, education, government benefits and the right to vote.

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27 US TX: PUB LTE: Drugs And ImmigrationSun, 27 Jul 2014
Source:Longview News-Journal (TX) Author:Supercinski, Frank Area:Texas Lines:37 Added:07/29/2014

Reports repeatedly conclude habitual drug use in the United States is the root cause for children from Central America to illegally come here. The drug cartels there use violence to make them leave, or the children can stay and be killed.

The armed forces, several thousand law enforcement employees, miles of fences and walls, electronic and air spying, jails and deportation proceedings - all of these combined will not greatly alleviate this latest immigration problem we bring upon ourselves. Besides, all of them are a great waste of time, money and manpower except for those among us who want to make money by these means.

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28US TX: Editorial: Lower Sentences For DrugsMon, 28 Jul 2014
Source:Dallas Morning News (TX)          Area:Texas Lines:Excerpt Added:07/29/2014

Commission Right to Offer Reduced Penalty

America's effort to use our prisons to stem the illegal drug problem has largely failed. Incarceration of drug offenders has seen prison and jail populations skyrocket, even as public opinion has shifted away from harsh sentences for nonviolent drug crimes.

That's why the U.S. Sentencing Commission was right to decide this month that some 50,000 federal drug trafficking offenders could be eligible for reduced sentences. The amendment to federal sentencing guidelines, approved in April, is already in effect for offenders facing sentencing in the future, creating an issue of fairness: Why should the length of a sentence be determined by the date of sentencing?

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29 US TX: PUB LTE: U.S. Supporting Drug CartelsWed, 23 Jul 2014
Source:Dallas Morning News (TX) Author:White, Gilbert Area:Texas Lines:30 Added:07/26/2014

No one seems to want to face up to the bad policies and laws that have created our latest immigration problems on our southern border. Starting in 1937 with the prohibition of marijuana and all other recreational drugs thereafter, America has funded all the drug cartels in Mexico and Central and South America to such an extent that they are more powerful than the governments in those countries.

These cartels have destroyed the economies in these countries and created such violence and lawlessness that the refugees from these countries are fleeing here for safety and economic opportunity. Remember that alcohol prohibition fueled organized crime in America previous to this prohibition of drugs. We didn't seem to learn from the previous mistake. Easy, feel-good legislation is not always a good thing. We created this problem!

Gilbert White, Ennis

[end]

30US TX: OPED: Marijuana Legalization Now Policy, Not Just TrendThu, 17 Jul 2014
Source:Houston Chronicle (TX) Author:Hale, Gary J. Area:Texas Lines:Excerpt Added:07/18/2014

Good governance is about good stewardship. Government executives always should consider how best to use the government's vast assets, including personnel, money and materials.

In this light, continued opposition by the Drug Enforcement Administration to the legalization of cannabis - marijuana - is not only a losing battle but a waste of taxpayer money, particularly when the president, Congress and an increasing number of state legislatures are responding to the will of the people by decriminalizing nonviolent marijuana use and possession. Our federal tax dollars would be better spent by responding to the current widespread increase of heroin use in ways that will prevent continued abuse, reduce harm to users and provide for greater public safety.

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31 US TX: OPED: The End Of Pot Prohibition As We Know ItWed, 16 Jul 2014
Source:Gilmer Mirror, The (TX) Author:Greco, Emily Schwartz Area:Texas Lines:107 Added:07/17/2014

How much longer will it take before the United States declares a truce in the Drug War?

Without federal leadership, you can count on marijuana legalization to keep spreading one state at a time.

This latter-day prohibition is taking an immense toll. And the stakes ought to be low, given that mostAmericans don't want anyone jailed for being caught with small amounts of pot.

But it does require some courage to pipe up. So thank you, former Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens, for joining the swelling chorus that wants to see marijuana legalized.

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32 US TX: OPED: Let's Legalize Pot Responsibly in TexasSat, 28 Jun 2014
Source:Waco Tribune-Herald (TX) Author:Deuvall, Clifford Area:Texas Lines:88 Added:06/28/2014

As a former educational professional, I've witnessed the negative social impacts and negative opportunity costs of cannabis prohibition. I observed these negative impacts while working with inner city youth; I also took note that these effects existed in my own suburban neighborhood. The world is our backyard. I began to observe how easy it was for teens to access cannabis on the illicit market and how many are left to endure life-altering criminal convictions. I examined the constant draining of tax dollars, all the while watching the expansion of violent criminal cartels.

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33 US TX: Austin Gives Symbolic Support For Legalization Of MedicalFri, 27 Jun 2014
Source:Austin American-Statesman (TX) Author:Rockwell, Lilly Area:Texas Lines:39 Added:06/27/2014

The measure, approved unanimously by the council, is symbolic.

The city has very little influence over whether the Legislature legalizes marijuana and it's considered unlikely to gain approval in the 2015 legislative session.

Only two speakers testified about the measure to the council, and both were in support.

In a sign of how non-controversial this issue is in left-leaning Austin, it was approved with no council discussion or debate as part of the consent agenda.

Council Members Bill Spelman and Mike Martinez, who sponsored the resolution, cited a Scripps-Howard poll that found 75 percent of Texans would support legislation allowing people with serious illnesses to use marijuana to treat themselves.

Supporters consider it an important step in the effort to legalize marijuana for medical use. Currently all forms of marijuana are illegal in Texas.

More than 20 states, including Colorado and California, have taken steps to legalize the use of marijuana for medical ailments, such as muscular dystrophy.

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34 US TX: Give Adults Freedom Of Choice On Pot UseTue, 24 Jun 2014
Source:Austin American-Statesman (TX) Author:Muse, Kirk Area:Texas Lines:32 Added:06/26/2014

Re: June 9 commentary, "Pot isn't harmless; making it legal would be a disaster." I agree that legalizing cannabis would be a disaster for professional drug war cheerleader Calvina Fay because she would be unemployed. I'd like to add that the cannabis legalization issue is not whether cannabis is completely safe for everybody, including children and adolescents; it is not. The issue is freedom of choice for adults. Children have died from eating peanuts and peanut butter but we don't cage peanut growers, sellers or consumers. One in thirteen children suffer from food allergies, yet we have no foods that are outlawed. And the voters of Colorado and Washington state have decided that we should not cage cannabis growers, sellers or consumers. Texas adults have the freedom of choice of whether or not to consume legal alcohol. Shouldn't they have the same freedom of choice regarding legal cannabis?

MESA, ARIZ.

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35 US TX: PUB LTE: Prohibition On Pot Not The SolutionTue, 24 Jun 2014
Source:Austin American-Statesman (TX) Author:Sharpe, Robert Area:Texas Lines:35 Added:06/26/2014

Re: June 9 commentary, "Pot isn't harmless; making it legal would be a disaster."

Calvina Fay is right about one thing. Like any drug, marijuana can be harmful if abused. Marijuana prohibition doesn't make the plant safer though. Prohibition opens up a gateway to hard drugs by granting a marijuana monopoly to drug cartels that also sell meth, cocaine and heroin. Like alcohol prohibition before it, marijuana prohibition has given rise to a youth-oriented black market. Drug cartels don't ID for age.

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36 US TX: Cannabis Brownies Leave Teen Facing LifeTue, 24 Jun 2014
Source:Press, The (New Zealand)          Area:Texas Lines:47 Added:06/26/2014

A Texas teenager could face up to 99 years in prison for making and selling brownies infused with cannabis, despite the product being legal elsewhere in the United States.

Jacob Lavoro, 19, was arrested on April 14 after a neighbour smelled suspiciously pungent smoke and called the police. The authorities allege that after entering his apartment they found an illicit baking operation that included the brownies, a pound of cannabis, hash oil and US$1675 (NZ$1900) in cash.

His case is more serious because prosecutors can charge him based on the entire weight of the brownies' ingredients, which amounted to 660 grams, instead of just the weight of the oil, a substance that is more tightly controlled than ordinary cannabis buds. In Texas, possession of more than 400g of hash oil with intent to deliver can yield up to life in prison.

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37US TX: Editorial: Worth ExploringSat, 21 Jun 2014
Source:Houston Chronicle (TX)          Area:Texas Lines:Excerpt Added:06/26/2014

If Cannabis Works, We Owe Our Veterans Access to This PTSD Treatment Option.

Post-traumatic stress disorder, or PTSD, plagues many veterans in this country. The depression, anxiety and flashbacks typical of this disorder can make vets' adjustment back to civilian life difficult.

Some veterans say that marijuana helps alleviate symptoms of the disorder and may pose fewer long-term health risks than present treatment options such as opioid painkillers, antidepressants and sleeping pills. Some experts agree. "Legalizing cannabis for medical use won't restore missing limbs or heal skin scarred by fire, but it can help wounded veterans live a more normal life," William Martin, director of the drug policy program at Rice University's Baker Institute for Public Policy, maintains. Yet, right now in Texas, a vet who is suffering from PTSD and who uses marijuana to self-medicate is committing a crime.

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38 US TX: Attorney: Police Search Lacked Valid ConsentFri, 20 Jun 2014
Source:Austin American-Statesman (TX) Author:Osborn, Claire Area:Texas Lines:78 Added:06/21/2014

Police Were Allowed in Apartment by Resident, Arrest Warrant Says

GEORGETOWN- The case against Jacob Lavoro, who could face a steep sentence for allegedly making and selling pot brownies, should be thrown out because police never had a warrant to search his apartment, his lawyer said Thursday as supporters rallied outside a court hearing at the Williamson County Justice Center.

Police were responding in April to a tip from a neighbor complaining about marijuana smoke coming from Lavoro's Round Rock apartment when they arrived at his door announcing they were maintenance men, said Jack Holmes, Lavoro's lawyer. Even after someone opened the apartment door, police had no evidence that there were illegal substances inside, but they entered anyway, Holmes said.

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39 US TX: PUB LTE: Edible Pot Not For New UsersTue, 10 Jun 2014
Source:Dallas Morning News (TX) Author:Sharpe, Robert Area:Texas Lines:44 Added:06/11/2014

Re: "My bad trip on edible marijuana - Colorado coming to grips with darker side of legalizing pot for the public, says Maureen Dowd," Friday Viewpoints.

Naive marijuana users like Maureen Dowd may be in for an unpleasant surprise if they choose edibles as a means of experimenting with legal marijuana in Colorado. The delayed onset effects can be overpowering. Colorado should require warning labels. First-time users should be discouraged from trying marijuana in edible form. The horror stories coming out of Colorado obscure the fact that marijuana consumption is safer under legalization.

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40US TX: Editorial: Recreational MarijuanaMon, 09 Jun 2014
Source:Texarkana Gazette (TX)          Area:Texas Lines:Excerpt Added:06/11/2014

Arkansas AG Approves Ballot Title for Proposed Constitutional Amendment

Come November, Arkansas voters could be the first in the South to decide whether or not to legalize marijuana for recreational use. Last week, Attorney General Dustin McDaniel certified the wording of a proposed state constitutional amendment called "The Arkansas Hemp and Cannabis Amendment."

The amendment would allow the "cultivation, distribution, sale and use of the cannabis plant" and all products derive from the plant throughout the state.

The Legislature would have the authority to regulate, but not ban pot in the state. Now all supporters have to do is gather more than 78,000 signatures of registered Arkansas voters to secure the proposal a spot on the November ballot. Not an easy task. But not impossible, either. Two other ballot initiates regarding legal marijuana could end up on the ballot as well. Both would legalize marijuana for medicinal purposes, not recreational.

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