Mother Jones _US_ 1/1/1997 - 31/12/2024
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1 US: In A Radical Shift, California Police Chiefs Push For RegulationThu, 13 Mar 2014
Source:Mother Jones (US) Author:Harkinson, Josh Area:United States Lines:76 Added:03/13/2014

California was the first state to legalize medical marijuana, but like the pimply-faced stoner dude you may have known in high school, it hasn't had the healthiest of relationships with Mary Jane. The Golden State differs from most others with medical pot laws in that it doesn't actually regulate production and sale of the herb. Instead,

it lets cities and counties enact their own laws-though in practice most haven't. The result has been the Wild West of weed: Almost any adult can score a scrip and some bud from a local dispensary, assuming, of course, that it hasn't yet been raided and shut down by the feds.

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2 US MA: Just Say No To Mexican Drug War PresidentThu, 03 Jan 2013
Source:Mother Jones (US) Author:Liebelson, Dana Area:Massachusetts Lines:86 Added:01/03/2013

Harvard man Felipe Calderon is headed back to his alma mater, much to the chagrin of his detractors.

Former Mexican President Felipe Calderon, who led a controversial military crackdown on drug cartels, is moving to the United States to take an academic fellowship with Harvard University. But protesters, both Mexican and American, say that given Calderon's political past, he shouldn't be offered this prestigious position or even allowed to work here.

"It's a total disgrace to the families of Mexican citizens who lost their lives because of the drug war," says John Randolph, who worked for the US Border Patrol for 26 years before retiring, and has posted a petition on Change.org asking Harvard to rescind Calderon's fellowship.

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3 US: The Patriot's Guide to LegalizationWed, 01 Jul 2009
Source:Mother Jones (US) Author:Drum, Kevin Area:United States Lines:317 Added:07/06/2009

Have You Ever Looked at Our Marijuana Policy? I Mean, Really Looked at It?

WHEN WE THINK of the drug war, it's the heavy-duty narcotics like heroin and cocaine that get most of the attention.

And why not? That's where the action is. It's not marijuana that is sustaining the Taliban in Afghanistan, after all. When Crips and Bloods descend into gun battles in the streets of Los Angeles, they're not usually fighting over pot. The junkie who breaks into your house and steals your Blu-ray player isn't doing it so he can score a couple of spliffs.

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4 US: The Drug War In Six ActsWed, 01 Jul 2009
Source:Mother Jones (US) Author:Wallace-Wells, Ben Area:United States Lines:219 Added:07/01/2009

How Right-Wing Posses Started the Crack Trade, and Other Tales That Will Blow Your Mind.

Vivian Blake's War

In the late 1970s, a young Jamaican man named Vivian Blake, a scholarship kid from the Tivoli Gardens ghetto of Kingston, arrived in New York as part of a traveling cricket exhibition, stuck around, and began selling marijuana.

One of the last great political proxy fights of the Cold War was then unfolding in Jamaica: Both the left-wing party, friendly to Castro, and its right-wing opponents built violent electioneering posses to persuade friendly voters and attack unfriendly ones--800 Jamaicans died. Blake was affiliated with the right-wing Shower Posse. He helped funnel pot and, later, cocaine to the United States and sent guns back home to help the posses intimidate voters. After the election, the new government tried to drive the posses off the island, and many arrived in New York and Miami, fully formed, violent organizations, deprived of their political purpose and looking for something to do.

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5 US: This Is Your War on DrugsWed, 01 Jul 2009
Source:Mother Jones (US) Author:Bauerlein, Monika Area:United States Lines:110 Added:06/30/2009

Since 1998, the Drug Czar Has Been Mandated to Lie to the American People. So What Would a Fact-Based Drug Policy Look Like?

AMONG OUR LEADERS in Washington, who's been the biggest liar? There are all too many contenders, yet one is so floridly surreal that he deserves special attention. Nope, it's not Dick Cheney or Alberto Gonzales or John Yoo. It's a trusted authority figure who's lied for 11 years now, no matter which party held sway. (Nope, it's not Alan Greenspan.) This liar didn't end-run Congress, or bully it, or have its surreptitious blessing at the time only to face its indignation later. No, this liar was ordered by Congress to lie--as a prerequisite for holding the job.

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6 Bolivia: A Bitter LeafTue, 01 Jul 2008
Source:Mother Jones (US) Author:Vernaschi, Marco Area:Bolivia Lines:139 Added:07/01/2008

There hasn't yet been a tin or copper war, but there once was a nitrate war, and in the past decade Bolivia has seen both a water war and a gas war-the latest struggles over the nation's only real riches, the lucrative resources granted by God and geology.

In this country nearly twice the size of France, where Amazonian jungles butt against 12,000-foot plateaus, the winners have always come from elsewhere.

The Inca royalty of Cuzco (in modern-day Peru) took power from the local Aymara; the Spanish took gold and silver; the British took tin; recently, multinationals Bechtel and Suez tried to privatize the water supplies of Cochabamba and El Alto, while other foreign companies fought for control of Bolivia's prodigious supply of natural gas; cartels continue to take the coca and its profits.

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7 US: Web: Nevada Conservatives Against the War on DrugsFri, 11 Aug 2006
Source:Mother Jones (US) Author:Abramsky, Sasha Area:United States Lines:121 Added:08/11/2006

If Passed, a Fall Ballot Initiative With Some Unlikely Supporters Could Turn Reno and Vegas into American Amsterdams.

Voters have been losing their taste for the war on drugs lately; in the past few years, states from Arizona and Alaska to California and Hawaii have moved toward making marijuana, in particular, a low priority for law enforcement, with first-offense possession cases often dismissed with small-time fines and medical-marijuana measures on the books in several states.

But the initiative voters in Nevada will be considering this fall goes much further: The "tax and regulate" measure, whose supporters got it on the ballot by collecting 86,000 signatures, would allow anyone over 21 to possess up to one ounce for personal use, would set up a system of pot shops (at a specified distance from schools), and would tax marijuana in a manner comparable to alcohol.

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8 US: Toking DiplomacyTue, 01 Nov 2005
Source:Mother Jones (US) Author:Greenberg, Gary Area:United States Lines:116 Added:11/01/2005

The U.S. Drug Czar's Battle With Canada's Prince Of Pot

If you were the guy everyone called the prince of pot and the U.S. drug czar came to town rattling his saber, you'd probably have the sense to stay out of his way. At the very least, you wouldn't go out of your way to antagonize him, let alone pay $500 for the privilege.

But that's exactly what Marc Emery did. Emery is a Canadian entrepreneur who presided over the world's largest marijuana seed sales business.

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9 US: Interview: An Interview With Lester Grinspoon, MDTue, 01 Nov 2005
Source:Mother Jones (US) Author:Greenberg, Gary Area:United States Lines:469 Added:11/01/2005

October 17, 2005 -- Gary Greenberg, a Mother Jones contributing writer, is a psychotherapist and professor of psychology, and the author of "Respectable Reefer," in the November/December issue of the magazine. Lester Grinspoon, M.D., is associate professor emeritus of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School, and the author of Marihuana Reconsidered, and Marijuana: The Forbidden Medicine.

Lester Grinspoon: Sativex is the kind of thing I was concerned about when I first spoke of the concept of pharmaceuticalization in 1985 to describe Marinol.. At the time the federal government was under a lot of pressure to look at the medical uses of marijuana. So the government supported this little company Unimed to create Marinol, which is simply synthetic THC [tetrahyrdrocannabinol], which is identical to the THC that you find in cannabis. So Unimed comes out with it. It was very expensive, and I have yet to have a patient or to hear from a patient who thinks Marinol is as good as whole smoked herbal marijuana. With Sativex, Geoffrey Guy went to the home office and said in effect, "Look, everybody knows that cannabis has medicinal utilities," and the British government, just like the U.S. government, was being pressed to do something about it. He then said, "I have the plans for a product which will deliver all the medical capacities of cannabis, but at the same time not impose on the medical user the two most frightful things about cannabis -- the high and the pulmonary effect." To me, that was based on a deception because we know now that the pulmonary problems are minimal. As for the high, I don't believe that the high is a big problem in people with Crohn's Disease or Multiple Sclerosis, who feel better when they smoke cannabis-that's probably a function of the anti-depressant effect of this substance. What's the problem with that?

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10 US: Respectable ReeferTue, 01 Nov 2005
Source:Mother Jones (US) Author:Greenberg, Gary Area:United States Lines:586 Added:10/18/2005

How a Pulverized, Liquefied, and Doctor-Prescribed Form of Marijuana Could Transform the Drug-War Landscape

IF IT WEREN'T FOR the little photo gallery on the wall, the office where Dr. William Notcutt's research assistants keep track of their patients would be just like any other cubicle at the James Paget Medical Center in England. As phones ring and stretchers wheel by and these three women go about their business, the snapshots--Cheryl Phillips, one of Notcutt's staffers, gently holding an emerald green bud of marijuana; a group of people in lab coats smiling for the camera, sinsemilla towering over their heads; a hangar-sized greenhouse stuffed to the gills with lush pot plants--are about the only evidence that this hospital in East Anglia is at the epicenter of one of the most extensive medical marijuana research projects in the world.

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11 US: Web: An Interview With Lester Grinspoon, M.D.Mon, 17 Oct 2005
Source:Mother Jones (US Web) Author:Greenberg, Gary Area:United States Lines:474 Added:10/17/2005

LG: Sativex is the kind of thing I was concerned about when I first spoke of the concept of pharmaceuticalization in 1985 to describe Marinol. At the time the federal government was under a lot of pressure to look at the medical uses of marijuana. So the government supported this little company Unimed to create Marinol, which is simply synthetic THC [tetrahyrdrocannabinol], which is identical to the THC that you find in cannabis. But that THC they put into Schedule II -- it's so ridiculous! So Unimed comes out with it. It was very expensive, and I'll tell you Gary, I have yet to have a patient or to hear from a patient who thinks Marinol is as good as whole smoked herbal marijuana. With Sativex, Geoffrey Guy went to the home office and said in effect, "Look, everybody knows that cannabis has medicinal utilities," and the British government, just like the U.S. government, was being pressed to do something about it. He then said, "I have the plans for a product which will deliver all the medical capacities of cannabis, but at the same time not impose on the medical user the two most frightful things about cannabis -- the high and the pulmonary effect." To me, that was based on a deception because we know now that the pulmonary problems are minimal. As for the high, I don't believe that the high is a big problem in people with Crone's Disease or Multiple Sclerosis, who feel better when they smoke cannabis-that's probably a function of the anti-depressant effect of this substance. What's the problem with that? Secondly I question whether one can, in all instances where cannabis is useful as medicine, bring that utility in below the level at which one gets some degree of a psychoactive effect.

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12 CN BC: Toking DiplomacyTue, 01 Nov 2005
Source:Mother Jones (US) Author:Greenberg, Gary Area:British Columbia Lines:123 Added:10/17/2005

If you were the guy everyone called the prince of pot and the U.S. drug czar came to town rattling his saber, you'd probably have the sense to stay out of his way. At the very least, you wouldn't go out of your way to antagonize him, let alone pay $500 for the privilege.

But that's exactly what Marc Emery did. Emery is a Canadian entrepreneur who presided over the world's largest marijuana seed sales business.

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13 US: Web: Remember The War On Drugs?Wed, 04 Aug 2004
Source:Mother Jones (US) Author:Fleischer, Jeff Area:United States Lines:98 Added:08/05/2004

Long before the War on Terror started driving U.S. foreign policy, Washington set out to win the War on Drugs, with a particular focus on nations like Colombia, which exports up to 90 percent of America's cocaine. But, as recent developments there illustrate, victory is still proving elusive.

On Monday, Colombian president Alvaro Uribe offered more concessions to rightist paramilitary groups, promising to create additional "haven" areas where two warring organizations can negotiate with the government. In such havens, paramilitary leaders and troops can speak with government representatives without fear of arrest or extradition to the United States on drug-trafficking charges. In exchange, Uribe wants the groups to declare a cease-fire and begin disarming.

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14 US: Web: Bigger Brother?Mon, 25 Aug 2003
Source:Mother Jones (US)          Area:United States Lines:101 Added:08/31/2003

Utah Senator Orrin Hatch and four of his Republican cronies are out to make the word "narco-terrorism" a household term. Dan Eggen of the Washington Post reports that a draft of the Vital Interdiction of Criminal Terrorist Organizations Act (that's VICTORY as an acronym) would make broad changes to drug trafficking laws, allow for expanded FBI and local police wiretapping, and clamp down on a traditional Middle Eastern form of money transfer. According to Ryan Singel at Wired News, a draft of the bill defines narco-terrorism as "the crime of selling, distributing or manufacturing a controlled substance with the intent of helping a terrorist group." Essentially, the Victory Act would make it easier for Ashcroft and his minions to charge drug offenders with aiding terrorists, and could potentially freeze the assets of a suspected offender. Though Hatch's spokespersons refused to comment on the legislation, she did acknowledge the push to investigate the drug-terrorism link, stating that Hatch "is continuing to look at all legislative options for combating the nexus between drug trafficking and terrorism."

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15 US: Book Review: Saying Yes: In Defense of Drug UseTue, 01 May 2003
Source:Mother Jones (US) Author:Shenk, Joshua Wolf Area:United States Lines:128 Added:05/05/2003

Saying Yes: In Defense of Drug Use By Jacob Sullum. - Tarcher/Putnam.

In 1914, Henry Ford published a tract inveighing against a substance that was enjoying a spike in popularity. He gathered testimonials from a host of luminaries, including Booker T. Washington, who said that the drug caused "a blunting of the moral sense," and Thomas Edison, who said it "has a violent action on the nerve centers, producing degeneration of the cells of the brain, which is permanent and uncontrollable." "I will employ no person," Edison concluded, "who smokes cigarettes."

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16 US: Bush's New Political ScienceFri, 01 Nov 2002
Source:Mother Jones (US) Author:Silverstein, Ken Area:United States Lines:116 Added:11/01/2002

When it comes to public-health appointments, the administration has its own litmus test.

As the nation's premier research center, the National Institutes of Health is supposed to be insulated from politics. The agency has long appointed respected health professionals -- regardless of their political beliefs -- to advisory councils that help direct the nation's medical research on everything from genetic disorders to the common cold. "The NIH casts a broad net and deliberately creates a diverse council that can give them input," says Steven Hayes, a University of Nevada professor who sits on the National Advisory Council on Drug Abuse at the NIH.

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17 US CA: Web: Pot Club Crackdown ContinuesFri, 15 Feb 2002
Source:Mother Jones (US) Author:Huber, Emily Area:California Lines:77 Added:02/15/2002

The federal Drug Enforcement Agency ratcheted up its crackdown on medical marijuana clubs this week, confiscating thousands of plants and arresting four men in the San Francisco Bay Area. While the DEA has raided medical marijuana clubs several times in recent months, the arrests on Feb. 13 mark the first time suspects have been taken into custody.

Just hours before DEA head Asa Hutchinson was scheduled to speak in San Francisco, DEA agents seized 600 marijuana plants from the Sixth Street Harm Reduction Center, a well-known medical marijuana club located in a gritty section of downtown.

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18 US: Web: An Oily QuagmireWed, 06 Feb 2002
Source:Mother Jones (US) Author:Gitlin, Todd Area:United States Lines:121 Added:02/10/2002

Washington is warning Americans that drug addicts help support terrorists. But what about the nation's other habit -- cheap oil?

Buy drugs, support terrorism. That was the unsubtle message from federal drug policy officials as they launched a multi-million dollar advertising campaign during Sunday's Super Bowl.

Certainly, they have some evidence on their side. Terrorist groups from southeast Asia to South America are in the drug trafficking business. But in the meantime, another hazardous American addiction goes unchallenged. No crusade has been launched against a national dependency that delivers billions of dollars each year to foreign powers whose support for terror is far from fanciful: Oil.

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19 US: 2 LTE: Addicts and AdvocatesTue, 01 Jan 2002
Source:Mother Jones (US) Author:Harris, Barbara Area:United States Lines:48 Added:12/25/2001

Your article "Surgical Strike" (November/December) quotes people who look at our organization, Children Requiring a Caring Kommunity (CRACK), as anti-poor and anti-black because we offer drug addicts $200 to accept long-term birth control or sterilization so they won't produce more addicted babies. An NAACP official says, "How can you come in and say that you are concerned with the welfare of the mothers...?" Good question. We don't say we're concerned with the welfare of the mothers. CRACK's mission is to stop them from having more doomed babies.

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20 US: Web: America's Lonely Drug WarFri, 14 Dec 2001
Source:Mother Jones (US) Author:Smith, Adam J. Area:United States Lines:190 Added:12/16/2001

With the confirmation of John Walters as the new drug czar, the US is committing itself to a punishment-based War on Drugs -- even as most of its allies are declaring cease-fires.

In America's cities, punishment remains the rule in the War on Drugs.

Last December 5th marked the 68th anniversary of the effective end of Prohibition, drawing to close this nation's "noble experiment" with criminalizing alcohol. So it seems ironic that it was also the day on which the United States Senate confirmed John P. Walters as the new director of the Office of National Drug Policy -- the nation's drug czar.

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