RSS 2.0RSS 1.0 Inside Arkansas
Found: 37Shown: 1-37Page: 1/1
Detail: Low  Medium  High    Sort:Latest

1 US AR: PUB LTE: State's Drug Policy Needs ReviewWed, 17 Dec 2014
Source:Northwest Arkansas Times (Fayetteville, AR) Author:Bailey, Brad Area:Arkansas Lines:51 Added:12/19/2014

Regarding "How We See It: Prison Ideas Offer Hope for Solutions" (Dec. 4): If no one else is willing to spell it out, I will. Much of the overcrowding in Arkansas prisons is caused by state legislators who know they stand a greater chance of getting elected if they take a get-tough-on-drugs stance, and by law enforcement agencies who profit from the war on drugs via federal grant money and asset forfeiture laws. It's in the interest of both groups to broaden the definition of "lawbreakers" to be as inclusive as possible. In other words, the problem is systemic.

[continues 241 words]

2 US AR: Arkansas: Governor Will Pardon SonFri, 14 Nov 2014
Source:New York Times (NY) Author:Blinder, Alan Area:Arkansas Lines:76 Added:11/17/2014

Gov. Mike Beebe of Arkansas, before leaving office in January, plans to issue a pardon to his son, who was convicted of a felony drug offense more than a decade ago.

The governor's decision followed an October recommendation by the Arkansas Parole Board that Kyle Beebe's application for a pardon was "with merit." Mr. Beebe was convicted in 2003 of possession of marijuana with intent to deliver, and his sentence included three years of probation.

"At the time of my arrest, I was living in a fantasy world, not reality," Kyle Beebe, now 34, wrote in a letter to his father that was included in his June 21 pardon application. "I was young and dumb. At that time in my life, I felt like I was missing something, and I tried to fill that emptiness by selling drugs."

[continues 395 words]

3 US AR: Ark. Voters To Decide Entire State's 'Wet' FateThu, 30 Oct 2014
Source:Commercial Appeal (Memphis, TN) Author:Deprez, Esme E. Area:Arkansas Lines:57 Added:11/01/2014

Unusual ballot issue draws broad lines, odd partnerships on Prohibition-era 'dry' option

OZARK, Ark.- Arkansas liquor stores have allied with religious leaders to fight statewide legalization of alcohol sales. The stores in wet counties don't want to lose customers. The churches don't want to lose souls.

A ballot issue next week asks voters whether to amend their constitution to permit sales of intoxicating liquors in all 75 counties, up from about half. Passage would further erode the shrinking swath of America, mostly in the South, clinging to vestiges of Prohibition even as cultural attitudes and waning religious influence have killed it off elsewhere.

[continues 235 words]

4 US AR: LTE: A Real War On DrugsMon, 21 Jul 2014
Source:Arkansas Democrat-Gazette (Little Rock, AR) Author:Duty, Jess Area:Arkansas Lines:48 Added:07/23/2014

Why hasn't the United States government done more since the '60s to stop the flow or destroy the source of incoming drugs from Colombia and Mexico?

Why haven't we napalmed the coca plant fields in Colombia and the marijuana fields in Mexico? Why is our Air Force practicing touch-and-go missions in central Arkansas instead of flying reconnaissance of our southern borders of California, Arizona and Texas? Why aren't more observation drones being used in this so-called war on drugs?

[continues 177 words]

5 US AR: LTE: Facing ConsequencesThu, 17 Jul 2014
Source:Arkansas Democrat-Gazette (Little Rock, AR) Author:Gutierrez, Porfirio Area:Arkansas Lines:39 Added:07/19/2014

Some Americans and their politicians do not like the fact that children from Central America are now coming to the U.S. Many of these children are fleeing drug-gang violence in their home countries. The drug gangs are fighting for the control of the drug traffic to users in the U.S. The unnatural, insatiable appetite of American drug users fuels the Central American violence.

I believe our politicians and the mass media are ignoring the obvious reasons for the problem. Outraged protesters want to stop the influx of these children and have tried to block the buses that transport them to centers where they can be processed. I think these misguided and shallow-thinking protesters and other Americans that think like them should focus their efforts on stopping American drug users. One of these drug users might be living right next door to you, or you might even know one in your own family.

[continues 57 words]

6US AR: Editorial: Thank You, ArkansasWed, 09 Jul 2014
Source:Arkansas Democrat-Gazette (Little Rock, AR)          Area:Arkansas Lines:Excerpt Added:07/11/2014

But the Fight Is Still Far From Over

IT LOOKS as if this fall's ballot in the general election here in Arkansas may be free of anything about marijuana. Call it a smoke-free election. Which is good. There's enough mud in the air as it is.

Word began filtering out on social media Monday. Those who run websites proposing legalization of weed for medicinal purposes began thanking their supporters, but putting out what was, for them, the bad news: They didn't get enough signatures in time to make the November ballot. Word also began circulating that another effort, one to legalize weed altogether, also failed to get the required number of signatures. The good news just kept coming.

[continues 455 words]

7 US AR: OPED: Stop Crisis By Ending War On DrugsSat, 05 Jul 2014
Source:Northwest Arkansas Times (Fayetteville, AR)          Area:Arkansas Lines:81 Added:07/07/2014

Since Oct. 1, U.S. Border Patrol agents have apprehended more than 52,000 children traveling alone from Central America and Mexico. Many of these kids made the dangerous trip to escape even more dangerous conditions in their home countries.

According to a 2013 United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees survey of 400 children who fled to the United States from Central America and Mexico, nearly half said drug cartel and gang violence had affected them personally, while 20 percent said they had been abused or otherwise experienced violence in their own homes.

[continues 509 words]

8US AR: 8-Year Sentence Stands in Ex-Officer's 'Pot' CaseWed, 02 Jul 2014
Source:Arkansas Democrat-Gazette (Little Rock, AR) Author:Satter, Linda Area:Arkansas Lines:Excerpt Added:07/05/2014

Not Entitled to Reduction, Panel Rules

A panel of the 8th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals on Tuesday upheld a more than 81/2-year sentence for former Little Rock police officer Mark Anthony Jones. He admitted to helping escort a load of marijuana across the city in 2012 - but later said he did so only because the FBI dangled an irresistible wad of cash in front of him.

Jones, 47, argued at his sentencing hearing in late October that because he cooperated with prosecutors, he was entitled to a sentence below the 97- to 121-month penalty range recommended by federal sentencing guidelines.

[continues 600 words]

9US AR: Editorial: A Half-Baked IdeaMon, 30 Jun 2014
Source:Arkansas Democrat-Gazette (Little Rock, AR)          Area:Arkansas Lines:Excerpt Added:07/04/2014

Marijuana Cupcake, Anyone?

A MOMENT, please, on the latest from the Wild, Wild, ever Wilder West: The business section isn't the place where you usually find the paper's horror stories. They're supposed to be limited to the reviews of scare flicks.

But there it was, a story in Saturday's business section, about . . . edible pot. And scary ain't the half of it.

Now that Colorado has legalized marijuana for recreational use-that's the next step after a state legalizes medical marijuana-folks out there are putting dope in their food. And not just their own food. Comes word from the Associated Press that some businesses in Colorado now offer weed in their cookies and cupcakes.

[continues 261 words]

10 US AR: PUB LTE: Got Any Cookies, Bro?Fri, 27 Jun 2014
Source:Arkansas Democrat-Gazette (Little Rock, AR) Author:Buchanan, C. Eugene Area:Arkansas Lines:37 Added:06/28/2014

It seems the Jason Rapert brain freeze spewed so much political humor that an equally humongous gaffe got by most people.

The same time the Reverend Rapert was doing his thing, Supreme Leader Jerry Cox had an experienced police officer from Colorado come down to preach against all things pertaining to marijuana, pot, cannabis, hemp and chocolate chip cookies. ( His 40 pounds of experience hung proudly over his belt.)

The officer assured Jerry and all four of his followers that if Arkansas allowed medical marijuana, recreational marijuana, and two- for-one Ding Dong sales, this state would go to pot. ( Sorry, could not pass on that one.)

[continues 68 words]

11 US AR: PUB LTE: Got Any Cookies, Bro?Fri, 27 Jun 2014
Source:Morning News, The (Springdale, AR) Author:Buchanan, C. Eugene Area:Arkansas Lines:38 Added:06/27/2014

It seems the Jason Rapert brain freeze spewed so much political humor that an equally humongous gaffe got by most people.

The same time the Reverend Rapert was doing his thing, Supreme Leader Jerry Cox had an experienced police officer from Colorado come down to preach against all things pertaining to marijuana, pot, cannabis, hemp and chocolate chip cookies. (His 40 pounds of experience hung proudly over his belt.)

The officer assured Jerry and all four of his followers that if Arkansas allowed medical marijuana, recreational marijuana, and two-for-one Ding Dong sales, this state would go to pot. (Sorry, could not pass on that one.)

[continues 62 words]

12US AR: OPED: Arkansas Could Be First State in South to DecideTue, 17 Jun 2014
Source:El Dorado News-Times (AR)          Area:Arkansas Lines:Excerpt Added:06/19/2014

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 derived 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.

[continues 233 words]

13US AR: Colorado Officer Discusses Problems Of Legalized 'Pot'Sat, 14 Jun 2014
Source:Arkansas Democrat-Gazette (Little Rock, AR) Author:Bellamy, Cammie Area:Arkansas Lines:Excerpt Added:06/15/2014

Anti-marijuana advocates met in Little Rock on Friday to hear from Sgt. Jim Gerhardt, a Colorado police officer who said legalization has caused major problems in his state.

The event, held at the state Chamber of Commerce and coordinated by the conservative Arkansas Family Council and law enforcement officials, focused on marijuana-related initiatives proposed for the November ballot.

Gerhardt has been a vocal opponent of pro-marijuana efforts in and beyond Colorado. Speaking from his experience with the Thornton (Colo.) Police Department and the Denver-based North Metro Drug Task Force, he urged attendees not to support legalization in Arkansas.

[continues 673 words]

14US AR: Editorial: Hey, You Skipped A StepSat, 07 Jun 2014
Source:Arkansas Democrat-Gazette (Little Rock, AR)          Area:Arkansas Lines:Excerpt Added:06/09/2014

Who's Trying to Jump Ahead in This Game?

Well I double-dog dare ya! Now it was serious. A double-dog dare. What else was there but a triple dare you, and then, the coup de grace of all dares, the sinister triple-dog dare. I triple-dog dare ya! Schwartz created a slight breach of etiquette by skipping the triple dare and going right for the throat!

- -From the best scene in A Christmas Story

WHAT'S happened here? This week the attorney general of Arkansas approved a ballot title for a constitutional amendment to legalize the possession and use of marijuana. Not just medical marijuana, either. The latest proposal would legalize the whole, dopey crop. For use next door, downstairs, across the way, or at the kitchen table. Not that any of this is the attorney general's fault. Dustin McDaniel's job, or one of them, is to make sure ballot titles meet constitutional standards, that's all, and he says this latest proposal does. So he did his duty. But still. Did we skip a step here? Here's the way the game is supposed to be played: First comes approval of medical marijuana. A proposition its pushers say would only allow the weed to be used by the sick and hurting who need the dope to assuage pain and increase appetite. Not that many of us, or maybe any of us, ever bought that. Because you know the kids always manage to find a way to get into the stash. (Think back to when you were a teen and from time to time took more than a look at the old man's liquor cabinet.)

[continues 320 words]

15US AR: Pro-'Pot' Effort Is Step Up In StateThu, 05 Jun 2014
Source:Arkansas Democrat-Gazette (Little Rock, AR) Author:Beherec, Sean Area:Arkansas Lines:Excerpt Added:06/07/2014

Legalization Bid Gains Ballot Title

Attorney General Dustin McDaniel on Wednesday approved the popular name and ballot title for a proposed constitutional amendment to make the "cultivation, manufacturing, distribution, sale, and possession and use" of marijuana legal in the state.

If the proposal gets on the fall ballot and is approved by voters, it will take effect April 20.

In a letter to the proposal's author, Robert Reed of Dennard in Van Buren County, McDaniel wrote that his review was limited to ensuring that the wording "honestly, intelligibly, and fairly" explains the purpose of the proposed amendment. McDaniel wrote that the proposed popular name was sufficient but that he substituted a "more suitable, complete and correct popular name and ballot title" and certified it.

[continues 417 words]

16 US AR: Arkansas Attorney General Approves Pot Ballot WordingThu, 05 Jun 2014
Source:Commercial Appeal (Memphis, TN)          Area:Arkansas Lines:28 Added:06/07/2014

The Arkansas Attorney General's Office has certified the wording of a ballot proposal that would legalize marijuana in Arkansas.

The Wednesday opinion opens the way for the measure's sponsor, Robert L. Reed, to begin gathering petition signatures in hope of placing the measure on the ballot.

According to the proposal, voters would decide whether to approve making it legal to grow and possess marijuana and all products derived from the cannabis plant.

The measure would be a constitutional amendment, which means backers would have to gather 78,133 valid signatures of registered voters to win a spot on the November ballot.

[end]

17 US AR: Legal Marijiuana Proposal RejectedSat, 10 May 2014
Source:Commercial Appeal (Memphis, TN)          Area:Arkansas Lines:26 Added:05/13/2014

The Arkansas attorney general's office has again rejected the proposed wording for a prospective ballot item that would let voters decide whether to legalize marijuana in the state.

Attorney General Dustin McDaniel's office on Friday told the group Arkansans for Medical Cannabis that the proposal is ambiguous and needs to make clearer what it would do.

McDaniel has previously rejected more than a half dozen of the group's proposals.

The group needs the attorney general's approval before it can start collecting signatures in an effort to get the measure on the ballot.

[end]

18 US AR: PUB LTE: Ensure Public HealthSat, 19 Apr 2014
Source:Arkansas Democrat-Gazette (Little Rock, AR) Author:Jones, Brent Area:Arkansas Lines:47 Added:04/19/2014

Modern times and the progression of marijuana laws call for a standard of proofing different types of marijuana strains. Marijuana is used today by many people around the United States for medical problems, such as nerve pain or chemotherapy-related nausea.

Would the government allow people to consume any type of other medication without strict guidelines on the drug and its ingredients? I think the federal government and FDA need to step in and require the regulation of all marijuana and THC-containing edibles to ensure public health and safety. Marijuana is not yet legal in all 50 states for medicinal use, but in the future it most likely will be, and there should be measures put into place ahead of time.

[continues 162 words]

19 US AR: LTE: Drug-Test Doctors TooSat, 19 Apr 2014
Source:Arkansas Democrat-Gazette (Little Rock, AR) Author:Willis, Kalisha Area:Arkansas Lines:46 Added:04/19/2014

Doctors are well-respected around the United States. I think you will rarely find doctors in today's world with any problems or anything wrong with them. But to be on the safe side, in my opinion, doctors, just like everyone else, should be drug-tested. To get other jobs you have to be drug-tested, so why can't doctors be like others and be drug-tested as well?

Some doctors could be all doped up while working on patients; who wants a doctor working on them while there's something wrong with them and they're not in their right mind? The way people are dying, we don't need the people we depend on and trust the most with our sickness to be the cause of deaths.

[continues 167 words]

20US AR: McDaniel Rejects Measure On 'Pot'Sun, 23 Mar 2014
Source:Arkansas Democrat-Gazette (Little Rock, AR)          Area:Arkansas Lines:Excerpt Added:03/25/2014

Arkansas Attorney General Dustin McDaniel on Friday rejected the popular name and ballot title of a proposed initiated act to make it legal to cultivate, sell and use "the cannabis plant."

McDaniel wrote in a letter to the measure's author, Arkansans for Medical Cannabis Chairman Robert Reed, that he was rejecting the items because of ambiguities in the text of the proposal.

McDaniel wrote that it was not clear to whom the proposal would apply and what regulatory authority, if any, the Legislature would have over the "right to cultivate, manufacture, distribute, sell and use" marijuana.

McDaniel has rejected at least five other similar submissions from Reed.

[end]

21US AR: Don't Risk Trying PotWed, 12 Mar 2014
Source:Sentinel-Record, The (AR) Author:Richards, Dave Area:Arkansas Lines:Excerpt Added:03/13/2014

Dear editor:

Marijuana is not a harmless drug that users are led to believe. The U. S. government classifies it in the most dangerous category, along with heroin, LSD and Ecstasy, and it is highly addictive.

The effects of marijuana are much more severe than alcohol. It is a "mind altering" drug. It impairs your judgment, which results in reckless and irresponsible decisions you wouldn't ordinarily make, oftentimes leaving terrible consequences. It stays in your system and continues to build up with usage. Just one joint will test positive a month after using it and children around you will test positive as well.

[continues 209 words]

22US AR: Column: Hyperbole Is Hefty For Legalizing DrugsSun, 02 Mar 2014
Source:Arkansas Democrat-Gazette (Little Rock, AR) Author:Lane, Charles Area:Arkansas Lines:Excerpt Added:03/03/2014

A new conventional wisdom is on the rise: Drug prohibition, or "the war on drugs," is a costly flop. It not only failed to cut drug use and associated social ills significantly but has also imposed additional social costs-or "catastrophic harm," as my colleague Radley Balko put it-far exceeding the benefits. Those costs include violent crime linked to the black-market drug trade as well as the mass arrest and incarceration of small-time users, a disproportionate number of whom are African American.

[continues 724 words]

23 US AR: PUB LTE: Follow Up On ResearchFri, 28 Feb 2014
Source:Arkansas Democrat-Gazette (Little Rock, AR) Author:McDowall, Doug Area:Arkansas Lines:31 Added:03/01/2014

Why so many anti-medical marijuana editorials lately? Seems to be lots of opinion but little factual information.

As I understand it, much of what little research on marijuana in the U.S. was done right here in Arkansas at the National Center for Toxicological Research facility in Jefferson back in the 1980s. Why not send a reporter down there to see if anyone involved is still around and talk to them about their study results?

Time is changing opinions of many about this plant, and if restrictions are eased on its cultivation, Arkansas farmers just might get a new crop to grow, and the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette a new source of cheaper newsprint that won't curl on the edges.

North Little Rock

[end]

24 US AR: PUB LTE: Rights In A Free NationThu, 27 Feb 2014
Source:Arkansas Democrat-Gazette (Little Rock, AR) Author:Orton, Bill Area:Arkansas Lines:48 Added:02/27/2014

It seems the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette editorial writers really have a bug up their butts about the noble weed. They decry the fact that people outside Colorado are freer, too, since free trade and freedom of association allows cannabis to be moved and traded. And apparently unable to find onerous statistics showing any bad effects whatsoever from legalization of the herb, they attempt to trick their readers. Their car-fatality stat is a classic in this regard. (Hint: There won't be any comparative auto-accident stats for years.)

[continues 191 words]

25US AR: 'Pot' Activist Seeks County Judge PostWed, 26 Feb 2014
Source:Arkansas Democrat-Gazette (Little Rock, AR)          Area:Arkansas Lines:Excerpt Added:02/27/2014

Marijuana-legalization activist Glen Schwarz filed as a candidate for Pulaski County judge Tuesday.

Schwarz, 60, is a Libertarian who is filing during the party's first year on election ballots since 2011.

In 2012, as the president of the Arkansas chapter of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws, Schwarz ran for the Little Rock Board of Directors' at-large position 9, where he finished third in the race won by City Director Gene Fortson.

Former state Rep. Barry Hyde filed for county judge Monday, the first day candidates could file for Pulaski County office. Hyde, 57, is a Democrat who served in the Arkansas House of Representatives from 2007 to 2012, when he was unable to run again because of term limits.

The county judge position has been filled for 23 years by Buddy Villines, who announced last year that he would not run again.

The filing period closes at noon Monday.

[end]

26US AR: State Attorney General Rejects Wording of MarijuanaThu, 20 Feb 2014
Source:El Dorado News-Times (AR)          Area:Arkansas Lines:Excerpt Added:02/21/2014

LITTLE ROCK (AP) - The Arkansas attorney general's office has rejected the wording of a proposal for the November ballot that would legalize marijuana in the state.

Attorney General Dustin McDaniel's office on Wednesday said the measure by Arkansans for Medical Cannabis contains ambiguities in its text.

McDaniel's office says the proposal doesn't explain that passage would change the state constitution. Further, the office cites an ambiguity in a section covering how the state would regulate sales.

[end]

27US AR: Campaign-finance, 'pot' Plans RejectedThu, 20 Feb 2014
Source:Arkansas Democrat-Gazette (Little Rock, AR) Author:Lauer, Claudia Area:Arkansas Lines:Excerpt Added:02/21/2014

Mcdaniel: Ballot Titles Ambiguous

Arkansas Attorney General Dustin McDaniel on Wednesday rejected ballot titles for two proposed constitutional amendments, citing ambiguities in the text of both.

One measure, proposed by Arkansans for Medical Cannabis, would repeal all laws prohibiting the sale, production and distribution of marijuana and prohibit the General Assembly from passing laws that prohibit cannabis or its derivatives. Representatives of the organization did not return messages seeking comment late Wednesday.

The second measure was proposed by the Arkansas Regnat Populus group. The measure would prohibit "corporations, proprietorships, firms, partnerships, joint ventures, syndicates, labor unions, business trusts, companies and associations" from making political contributions directly to candidates running for office, ban elected officials from working as lobbyists for two years after they leave office, and bar elected officials from accepting gifts from lobbyists.

[continues 325 words]

28US AR: Editorial: Deep In The WeedTue, 18 Feb 2014
Source:Arkansas Democrat-Gazette (Little Rock, AR)          Area:Arkansas Lines:Excerpt Added:02/19/2014

You-Know-Who Lives in the Details

IT'S HARD to avoid the news about marijuana these days. You could get a contact high from all the stories coming out of Colorado alone. Last week, some government outfit with a long name put out a report about weed's making its way out of that state, where it's now legal, and into other states where it's definitely not.

Goodness, who could have guessed that such a thing could happen? Except maybe everybody. If only Horace Greeley were writing editorials today, one of them might be headed, Go West, Young User!

[continues 621 words]

29 US AR: PUB LTE: Direct Fight ElsewhereMon, 10 Feb 2014
Source:Arkansas Democrat-Gazette (Little Rock, AR) Author:Vaughn, Scott T. Area:Arkansas Lines:34 Added:02/11/2014

I wish Paul Greenberg would dismount from his moral high horse and give marijuana a rest.

Instead of listening to his Guy Lombardo and Lawrence Welk records tonight, perhaps Paul should watch the 1930s propaganda classic, Reefer Madness. My favorite scene that I remember is the guy smoking a joint and then jumping out of an upstairs window.

Gateway drug? Sure, and those two beers at the fraternity house party turn you into an alcoholic. I believe decriminalization of the possession and use of small amounts of marijuana is both smart and inevitable. Too many law enforcement resources are wasted on chasing weed.

[continues 59 words]

30US AR: Column: Prohibition Not Working In War On DrugsTue, 04 Feb 2014
Source:Sentinel-Record, The (AR) Author:Robinson, Eugene Area:Arkansas Lines:Excerpt Added:02/05/2014

WASHINGTON - Oscar-winning actor Philip Seymour Hoffman is yet another victim of the war on drugs. Prohibition is not working. It is time to try something new.

Hoffman, 46, was found dead in the bathroom of his Manhattan apartment Sunday morning, apparently the victim of a heroin overdose. According to widely published reports, there was a syringe in his arm. Police found the place littered with small plastic bags stamped "Ace of Spades" or "Ace of Hearts" - brand names that street dealers use.

[continues 700 words]

31 US AR: LTE: Say No To Marijuana Legalization EffortWed, 29 Jan 2014
Source:Northwest Arkansas Times (Fayetteville, AR) Author:Lock, Eleanor Area:Arkansas Lines:42 Added:01/30/2014

I can remember, from when I was growing up, the ads in the papers that showed "doctors" touting the benefits of smoking (and) how many advantages there were to nicotine use. (It) calms nerves, soothes a sore throat. In fact, nine out of 10 doctors smoked Camels.

Of course, now we know better, as the evidence piled up showing nicotine is instrumental in causing deadly cancers, and COPD, among other ailments.

Now, we face legalization of marijuana, such as what has passed in Colorado and Washington State. We have the option of making marijuana, with all the incumbent propaganda, legal. I'm surprised we are not seeing ads popping up with men in white coats being quoted as saying, "Nine out of 10 doctors love getting high on marijuana."

[continues 117 words]

32US AR: Editorial: End Of The Bully PulpitFri, 24 Jan 2014
Source:Arkansas Democrat-Gazette (Little Rock, AR)          Area:Arkansas Lines:Excerpt Added:01/28/2014

A President Does His Best to Confuse the Issue

OH, FOR the days when a president of the United States only admitted to trying marijuana in his youth, claimed he didn't like it, and said, famously or infamously, that he didn't inhale.

This current president's comments to the New Yorker the other day about marijuana have been, well, selectively edited by some of our friends on the starboard side of the media. But the president shouldn't have his words changed. Not at all. What he said was confused enough, irrelevant enough, unhelpful and even harmful enough. Just quote him, folks. No need for embellishment.

[continues 1123 words]

33US AR: Column: My Decisions, My Responsibility, My ConsequencesSun, 19 Jan 2014
Source:Sentinel-Record, The (AR) Author:Parker, Kathleen Area:Arkansas Lines:Excerpt Added:01/20/2014

WASHINGTON - Everybody's doing it - confessing their youthful, pot- smoking ways - so here goes. I don't remember. Kidding, kidding. Anyone over 30 recognizes the old adage: If you remember the ' 60s, you weren't there. Nyuk-nyuk-nyuk.

It is true that marijuana smoking tends to affect one's short-term memory, but the good news is that, while stoned, one does relatively little worth remembering. At least that's my own recollection.

So, yes, I toked, too. This doesn't mean anyone else should, and I haven't in decades, but our debate might have more value if more of us were forthcoming.

[continues 678 words]

34 US AR: LTE: Pile Of Burning LeavesFri, 17 Jan 2014
Source:Arkansas Democrat-Gazette (Little Rock, AR) Author:Pankey, Ves Area:Arkansas Lines:27 Added:01/20/2014

Hooray for Denver. Hooray for marijuana and the tax dollars. Suppose there will be enough dollars to cover the needs of those addicted? Will there be help for those who cannot help themselves?

I hope and pray that Little Rock and its fine reputation will not be tainted by the scourge of the weed. Once was enough for me, several years ago in a small room with a low ceiling full of secondhand smoke. Very similar to a pile of burning leaves. Once was enough! How about you?

McCrory

[end]

35US AR: 'Pot' Amendment Rejected Yet AgainTue, 14 Jan 2014
Source:Arkansas Democrat-Gazette (Little Rock, AR)          Area:Arkansas Lines:Excerpt Added:01/16/2014

Attorney General Dustin McDaniel on Monday rejected a proposed constitutional amendment to repeal all laws limiting the production, distribution, sale and use of cannabis.

McDaniel wrote in a letter to the proposal's author, Marjorie LeClair of Shirley, that he could not certify the popular name and ballot title of the measure because of ambiguities in the amendment's text.

LeClair's proposals have been rejected by the attorney general's office on at least seven other occasions.

The proposed constitutional amendment would repeal all laws against the drug and prevent the Legislature from enacting any more in the future.

[continues 100 words]

36US AR: Column: Go West, Young DruggieThu, 09 Jan 2014
Source:Arkansas Democrat-Gazette (Little Rock, AR) Author:Ambrose, Jay Area:Arkansas Lines:Excerpt Added:01/10/2014

I live in Colorado's Rocky Mountains, and I am high. But wait. I mean that my house is 8,000 feet above sea level, not that I am giddily under the influence of marijuana legally purchased as a result of a historic development that could someday cause a teenager to think his TV is sending him secret messages.

What I am talking about is Colorado becoming the first state in the country to allow the selling of recreational pot without threat of criminal proceedings or the laughable excuse that it is for medicinal purposes only.

[continues 530 words]

37US AR: Editorial: Rocky Mountain HighMon, 06 Jan 2014
Source:Arkansas Democrat-Gazette (Little Rock, AR)          Area:Arkansas Lines:Excerpt Added:01/06/2014

Keep Your Eyes on the COLO News Wires

"They call marijuana a gateway drug. Medical marijuana could be called a gateway law. And the fight to keep such a law off the books in Arkansas isn't over yet. More petitions and votes are coming. Brace yourself. And until then, let's all keep a close eye on Colorado. Which might be hard. It's like watching a family member struggle with an addiction." - Arkansas Democrat-Gazette March 12, 2013

A COUPLE of groups are said to be working on getting a medical marijuana law on the books in Arkansas-again. The last effort was barely defeated at the polls. But the fight ain't over.

[continues 504 words]


Detail: Low  Medium  High   Pages: 1  

Email Address
Check All Check all     Uncheck All Uncheck all

Drugnews Advanced Search
Body Substring
Body
Title
Source
Author
Area     Hide Snipped
Date Range  and 
      
Page Hits/Page
Detail Sort

Quick Links
SectionsHot TopicsAreasIndices

HomeBulletin BoardChat RoomsDrug LinksDrug News
Mailing ListsMedia EmailMedia LinksLettersSearch