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161 US AZ: LTE: Don't Blame Mexico For Our Drug ProblemSun, 20 Sep 2015
Source:Arizona Republic (Phoenix, AZ) Author:Diaz, Joe Adam Area:Arizona Lines:32 Added:09/20/2015

The United States consumes more illegal narcotics by far than any other nation in the world. This country sends billions of dollars to Mexico and other countries south of our border for narcotics.

Drug cartels were necessary to manage the volume. It is simple supply and demand. Mexico gets blamed for the U.S. drug problem, but it's the insatiable and ever-increasing desire for dope in this country that keeps illegal drugs flowing north from Mexico.

Nearly all guns used in Mexican drug wars originate in the United States. Some of those guns have been traced back to U.S. government agencies. Despite drug wars fought over the U.S. dope market, the murder rate in the United States far overshadows that of Mexico.

Mexico is not to blame for the drug problem in the United States. There would be no drug cartels or drug traffic if not for the demand for dope from the United States.

- - Joe Adam Diaz, Phoenix

[end]

162 US AZ: In Defense Of MarijuanaThu, 10 Sep 2015
Source:Tucson Weekly (AZ) Author:Taracena, Maria Ines Area:Arizona Lines:285 Added:09/10/2015

Kyle Catlin and His Attorney Say He Did Nothing Wrong, and Are Counting on Arizona's Medical Marijuana Law's Ambiguity to Prevent Him From Life in Prison

The thought of possibly spending close to 100 years in prison terrifies Kyle Catlin.

But he's mostly concerned about his mom. She's not in the best of health. If something were to happen to her, "I may not even be allowed to leave prison to go to my mom's funeral, and that's super fucked up," he says. "I'm probably not gonna see her, except for behind glass for the rest of my life. It hurts so much to think about that I try not to think about it and move on with my day."

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163 US AZ: PUB LTE: Get Criminals Out of Pot Business by TreatingTue, 08 Sep 2015
Source:Arizona Republic (Phoenix, AZ) Author:Reis, Patrice Area:Arizona Lines:35 Added:09/08/2015

Judith Ray (Thursday letters) claims, "we all know that there is a serious drug problem in our schools with the legalization of medical marijuana," yet she does not cite any scientific studies to substantiate this myth.

A study recently published in Lancet Psychiatry found "no hint of an increase (in teenage use) at all" in states that legalized medical marijuana. This study, by Dr. Deborah Hasin of Columbia University, was based on surveys of more than 1 million adolescents in 48 states.

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164 US AZ: LTE: The Downside Of Legal Pot, From ColoradoSun, 06 Sep 2015
Source:Arizona Republic (Phoenix, AZ) Author:Griffin, Terry Area:Arizona Lines:37 Added:09/06/2015

I recently moved to Arizona from Denver, where I served as the metro Denver coordinator for The Salvation Army. While there, I witnessed the unintended consequences of legalized marijuana for which neither the city nor the state were prepared.

Our organization provided an emergency shelter in downtown Denver. When I arrived three years ago the shelter was averaging 200 men per night. When I left in May, the shelter was averaging 600 per night and every shelter in the city was full to overflowing.

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165US AZ: Column: Is Pot For Parties Or Prescriptions?Wed, 02 Sep 2015
Source:Arizona Republic (Phoenix, AZ) Author:Valdez, Linda Area:Arizona Lines:Excerpt Added:09/02/2015

Marijuana is either a harmless recreational high or a valuable medicine.

Or both. Or neither.

We don't really know. But we are being asked to make major policy choices anyway.

A proposal to add to the list of approved uses for medical marijuana includes eight new conditions, from arthritis and Autism to Tourette's syndrome and traumatic brain injury.

Why stop there? Let's just say it's a tonic for whatever ails you.

OK. Some people may benefit from medical marijuana, but official numbers on who uses it make me skeptical.

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166US AZ: Diane Douglas: Just Say No To 'Evil' Drug MoneySun, 30 Aug 2015
Source:Arizona Republic (Phoenix, AZ) Author:Sanchez, Yvonne Wingett Area:Arizona Lines:Excerpt Added:08/30/2015

Schools superintendent Diane Douglas blasted an effort to legalize marijuana in Arizona in a statement to the Insider, saying the use of "drug money" to fund schools would be "evil and hypocritical."

If approved by voters, the Campaign to Regulate Marijuana Like Alcohol would set up a system where consumers could openly buy marijuana. A tax on the cannabis would help fund K-12 education and, according to the campaign's estimates, could raise more than $40 million the first year for schools.

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167 US AZ: News21: America's Weed RushThu, 27 Aug 2015
Source:Tucson Weekly (AZ) Author:Campbell, Katie Area:Arizona Lines:151 Added:08/27/2015

With a federal ban on marijuana, states are left to craft their own medical pot rules-whether they work or not

After waiting in line for hours at a booth during a medical marijuana convention in San Francisco, Jeff Harrington needed only a two-minute consultation and a written recommendation to become a medical marijuana patient in California. He now can legally purchase and possess marijuana from any one of thousands of marijuana businesses in the state.

Across the country in Connecticut, an established physician-patient relationship is required before patients are deemed qualified for medical marijuana, and only licensed pharmacists can own and operate dispensaries.

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168 US AZ: PUB LTE: Let ME Have the Freedom to Enjoy Marijuana inTue, 25 Aug 2015
Source:Arizona Republic (Phoenix, AZ) Author:Meyer, Mike Area:Arizona Lines:36 Added:08/25/2015

Regarding the Saturday letter asking marijuana advocates to "own their passion," I, for one, am absolutely willing to own it.

I want marijuana legalized because I enjoy the feeling I get after I smoke it. I couldn't care less how much tax revenue it could potentially raise for schools, how much more money it would save in enforcement and incarceration costs, or even how much more rope or paper an acre of hemp yields versus an acre of trees.

I just want to smoke a bowl in the privacy of my own home.

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169 US AZ: LTE: All That Extra Money From a Pot Tax Would QuicklyTue, 25 Aug 2015
Source:Arizona Republic (Phoenix, AZ) Author:Gogek, Ed Area:Arizona Lines:31 Added:08/25/2015

Advocates for legalizing recreational marijuana in Arizona say it could provide $40 million for education. Reaping $40 million in marijuana taxes sounds good until you consider all the costs.

Extrapolating from a Rand Corporation study, Arizona spends $20 million each year for schizophrenia hospitalizations caused by marijuana. That comes out of the state budget.

Then consider the cost of drugged driving arrests and injuries, increased need for drug treatment, and policing underage use.

That $40 million gets eaten up fast and the state ends up in the red.

Just like alcohol and tobacco, legal marijuana would drain state coffers.

- - Prescott

[end]

170 US AZ: Column: Make Pot Legal To End Black MarketSun, 23 Aug 2015
Source:Arizona Daily Star (Tucson, AZ) Author:Steller, Tim Area:Arizona Lines:142 Added:08/24/2015

When I was 9 years old, a few older playmates from my fourth-through-sixth grade class started disappearing at lunchtime recesses. It took a long time before I found out what they were doing, somewhere off school grounds.

They were smoking pot.

This came to mind last week when proponents of Arizona's main marijuana-legalization effort pledged to provide $40 million per year in marijuana tax revenue for education if their initiative passes.

Even though I'm an instinctive advocate of legalization, I agreed when Arizona's Republican Party chairman, Robert Graham, called the pro-legalization event a "pathetic display." What's pathetic is the suggestion that $40 million means anything significant to a state public school system that spends around $4.7 billion of state money every year.

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171 US AZ: PUB LTE: Tax Projection May Be Wrong, but Good CaseSun, 23 Aug 2015
Source:Arizona Republic (Phoenix, AZ) Author:Fein, Marc Area:Arizona Lines:42 Added:08/23/2015

The Arizona Republic's Friday editorial questioning marijuana-legalization proponents' claim that $40 million would go to schools may be correct. There are other factors that should be considered.

In the same issue it was reported that DPS apprehend smugglers on I-17 and I-40 and recovered primarily marijuana. These smugglers are likely bound for an Arizona prison at an absurd expense. Additional expenses include the resources expended on the officer's time, the prosecutors and the courts. Avoiding these expenses would free up money for schools

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172US AZ: Higher RisksSat, 22 Aug 2015
Source:Arizona Republic (Phoenix, AZ) Author:Winer, Madeleine Area:Arizona Lines:Excerpt Added:08/23/2015

Experts and Users Warn of the Risks of Casual Smoking.

Elisabeth Davies smoked marijuana to escape. To ease anxiety. To decompress and forget about life's responsibilities.

Davies started as a social smoker at 17. Years would go by, and she wouldn't smoke pot.

"It made me feel better," said Davies, a life coach, counselor and author in Peoria. "It took away my anxiety and stress. It made my emotions more tolerable."

But when her father died 10 years ago, her casual use became an addiction. She smoked every day after work to escape the grief.

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173 US AZ: LTE: Pot-Legalization Advocates Need to Own TheirSat, 22 Aug 2015
Source:Arizona Republic (Phoenix, AZ) Author:Byrne, Larry Area:Arizona Lines:36 Added:08/23/2015

Thursday's Arizona Republic shares with us the latest smoke screen from the pro-legalized marijuana crowd. It includes the mandatory fake check made out to Arizona Schools and the catchy "Regulate Marijuana Like Alcohol" label.

Who would not support that all-American approach?

It would be nice if those smoking their proposed legal product would be honest about what they want. This isn't about the schools or about comparisons to alcohol.

This is about their specific desire to make something currently illegal legal. Period.

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174US AZ: Editorial: $40 Million From Pot for Schools? Um, No WayFri, 21 Aug 2015
Source:Arizona Republic (Phoenix, AZ)          Area:Arizona Lines:Excerpt Added:08/21/2015

How not to launch a campaign: with a lie. Yet that's what one set of advocates for legalized marijuana did this week. They staged an elaborate event on the state Capitol lawn to claim that taxing marijuana sales would pump $40 million into education. They even had a massive check made out to "Arizona Schools" for that amount. (Here's hoping no one was puffing enough to try to deposit that thing.)

The campaign's chairman, J.P. Holyoak, asserted that legalizing marijuana would be "for the benefit of education and public-health care." What bunk. That $40 million figure is pulled out of thin air. It is belied by the experience of states that jumped into this ill-begotten experiment. The Colorado initiative that legalized pot, for instance, promises the first $40 million each year will help pay for school construction. The tax generated $13.3 million last year, and might - might - reach $20 million this year.

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175 US AZ: LTE: So Taxes on Drug That Destroys Brain Cells WillFri, 21 Aug 2015
Source:Arizona Republic (Phoenix, AZ) Author:Farr, Sharon Area:Arizona Lines:32 Added:08/21/2015

I need to get something straight before I make a rash decision. I can't be the only one who is confused by this issue!

We're being asked to support the legalization of marijuana. And the sterling reason to do this would be to use the gazillions of dollars in revenue from taxes to fund our education system. So far so good!

But I think I'm missing something here. Any scientist worth his salt (who is not smoking marijuana) will tell you that marijuana causes loss and or damage to brain cells.

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176 US AZ: Series: Tribes Wait To Jump Into Weed RushThu, 20 Aug 2015
Source:Tucson Weekly (AZ) Author:Talama, Lex Area:Arizona Lines:116 Added:08/20/2015

Most Native American tribes are opting not to legalize marijuana, though at least two are poised to try it just six months after a U.J. Justice Department memo indicated federal authorities likely would not interfere with growing marijuana on tribal lands if other federal crimes were not committed.

Many tribes exploring their options said that as U.S. citizens and sovereign nations, they deserve the right to choose to legalize as states have done. However, tribes continue to balk at the vague language of the Justice Department's so-called "Cole Memorandum" and the fear of federal prosecution.

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177US AZ: Legal Pot Could Raise $40m For EducationThu, 20 Aug 2015
Source:Arizona Republic (Phoenix, AZ) Author:Sanchez, Yvonne Wingett Area:Arizona Lines:Excerpt Added:08/20/2015

Group: Initiative Would Help Underfunded Schools

Legalizing and taxing marijuana could raise an additional $40 million a year for education, according to estimates by the campaign to legalize the drug in Arizona.

The Campaign to Regulate Marijuana Like Alcohol, which is gathering signatures to qualify for the 2016 ballot, would establish a network of licensed cannabis shops where sales of the drug would be taxed.

J.P. Holyoak, campaign chairman, said at a news conference at the state Capitol, "We have a choice: We can either tax and regulate marijuana for the benefit of education and public-health care, or we can keep it illegal for the benefit of illegal drug cartels."

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178US AZ: OPED: Is Drug Dealing Non-Violent? Ask The DeadMon, 17 Aug 2015
Source:Arizona Republic (Phoenix, AZ) Author:Schmidt, Mike Area:Arizona Lines:Excerpt Added:08/17/2015

Prominent liberals and libertarians have joined to advocate "sentencing reform," code words for reduced prison sentences for a variety of so-called nonviolent offenses such as drug dealing and quantity possession.

This is naive or outright dishonest. Illicit drug peddling and consumption is a non-violent crime if you discount murders induced by drug rage or gang wars over drug-sales territory.

It's non-violent if you ignore the many people permanently injured or killed by drug use, even those who have great resources. Do I hear Elvis Presley, Len Bias, Michael Jackson, Whitney Houston and her daughter, among many of our famous entertainers and athletes?

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179US AZ: OPED: Marijuana Legalization Effort's Assurances RelyTue, 11 Aug 2015
Source:Arizona Republic (Phoenix, AZ) Author:Leibsohn, Seth Area:Arizona Lines:Excerpt Added:08/11/2015

Radical public policy reform should not be based on a guess. But lately, the marijuana lobby has been telling Arizonans they should legalize marijuana "just like alcohol," trying to persuade Arizonans to radically reverse decades of policy in everything from health care to criminal justice to education policy.

And it's all based on guesswork.

Their pitch: legalization will save money and improve education. But Arizonans should not pass a law to find out what's in it.

Supposedly, the initiative allows for limited amounts of marijuana for personal use. But what the initiative actually permits is possession of one ounce of marijuana and an additional 12 marijuana plants per household.

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180 US AZ: MMJ/Legalization OpinionThu, 06 Aug 2015
Source:Tucson Weekly (AZ) Author:Kingston, Dan Area:Arizona Lines:81 Added:08/06/2015

Four Reasons Why Law Enforcement Should Support Legalizing

Law enforcement was designed to protect our communities, but marijuana prohibition=ADand the drug war as a whole=ADhas become an overbearing distraction towards the maintaining of public safety. Prohibition contributes to an overall decrease in public safety and misuse of valuable resources. Here's why law enforcement across the country and around the world are pushing for marijuana legalization:

1. MARIJUANA PROHIBITION FUNDS CRIMINAL ORGANIZATIONS

Criminalizing a high-demand commodity only creates an illegal marketplace that generates wealth for individuals seeking to profit. If legalized, marijuana would create a legal marketplace and diminish illegal operations. Marijuana is often called the =93cash crop=94 by Mexican cartels, and legalizing medical marijuana access and recreational access in only a few states has already begun to weaken their cash flow. Nationwide marijuana legalization would devastate the enormous and lethal underground networks brought about by prohibition.

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