Daily Nexus _UC Santa Barbara, CA Edu_ 1/1/1997 - 31/12/2024
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1 US CA: Edu: Column: Votes on Tokes: Presidential Candidates'Fri, 26 Oct 2012
Source:Daily Nexus (UC Santa Barbara, CA Edu) Author:Roe, Michael Area:California Lines:105 Added:10/27/2012

With the approaching Presidential election in two weeks, I decided to devote this issue to the Presidential candidates and their assorted approaches on drug policy. After three debates between President Obama and Mitt Romney (in addition to three devastating debate drinking games), we've seen heated discourse on nearly every political subject but drug control policy. Also, for those who don't know that there are more than two choices for President, I included Gary Johnson and Jill Stein in today's drug discussion. To save you, my precious reader, time and effort I will now sarcastically outline each of the candidate's positions on drug use, control and spending:

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2 US CA: Edu: OPED: Regulation Not Incarceration: Why America'sFri, 19 Oct 2012
Source:Daily Nexus (UC Santa Barbara, CA Edu) Author:Strong, Mark Area:California Lines:116 Added:10/20/2012

In the past 40 years, America has spent a lot of money fighting foreign wars. Vietnam, Iraq, Iraq again, Afghanistan and these wars obviously come with a considerable price tag.

However, I'd like to take this opportunity to discuss an often-overlooked battle that also puts a hefty dent in the federal budget: the War on Drugs.

Since the 1970s, the American people were told increased spending on drug enforcement and harsher criminal sentencing would lead to reduced crime and drug use in the U.S. Instead, the exact opposite occurred. The drug addiction rate from 1970 to 2010 remains constant, fluctuating between 1 and 2 percent of the population. Meanwhile, drug control spending has skyrocketed. Since 1970, we've spent nearly $1.5 trillion fighting drugs. To put that figure in perspective, that's almost one tenth of our current national debt.

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3 US CA: Edu: PUB LTE: Legalization Could Help Put End ToTue, 21 Feb 2012
Source:Daily Nexus (UC Santa Barbara, CA Edu) Author:Washington, David Area:California Lines:76 Added:02/23/2012

After Whitney Houston's sudden death last Saturday, Tony Bennett didn't hesitate to publicly make the link to drugs that many suspected. At a Grammy pre-party, the 85-year-old addict in recovery stated: "First it was Michael Jackson, then it was Amy Winehouse and now the magnificent Whitney Houston. I'd like to have every gentleman and lady in this room commit themselves to get our government to legalize drugs."

Some point out that the problem with Bennett's statement is that it directly links the deaths of three famous musicians to the prohibition of drugs, which isn't exactly the case. The drugs that killed Michael Jackson and Amy Winehouse (and likely Whitney Houston if the prescription medication bottles found in her room are any indicator) were all legal. Jackson and (quite likely) Houston overdosed on prescription drugs prescribed by doctors while Winehouse died of acute alcohol intoxication.

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4 US CA: Edu: Column: The Pointlessness Of Pot PersecutionMon, 16 May 2011
Source:Daily Nexus (UC Santa Barbara, CA Edu) Author:McCarty, Kevin W. Area:California Lines:104 Added:05/19/2011

The fight for the right to use hemp and laugh at one's rulers has been happening constantly for centuries. The desire for a central authority to control and regulate the natural interconnectedness of living creatures stems from the fact that life is naturally awesome. According to the Book of Genesis in the King James Bible - the Judeo-Christian story of the creation of the universe - in the beginning, "the Earth brought forth grass and herb-yielding seed after its kind and the tree-yielding fruit, whose seed was in itself after his kind: and God saw that it was good."

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5 US CA: Edu: LTE: Puff Piece For Pot Fails To Deliver AdequateWed, 18 May 2011
Source:Daily Nexus (UC Santa Barbara, CA Edu) Author:Long, Connor Area:California Lines:57 Added:05/19/2011

Maybe I just don't get it, but as a longtime reader of the Nexus' drug articles, I still find myself at a loss as to what the paper or frequent drug columnist Kevin McCarty is actually advocating. A recent column ("The Pointlessness of Pot Persecution," Daily Nexus, May 16, 2011) essentially stated "the man is keeping us down by illegalizing weed," and then - and this one is a direct quote, mind you - insisted that "we only need a nanny state to take care of us because we have become disconnected from our natural niche within nature." The column goes on to assert that social programs, modern medicine and war are merely byproducts of our disconnect from the natural state of affairs.

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6 US CA: Edu: Mothers Call For Drug ReformFri, 06 May 2011
Source:Daily Nexus (UC Santa Barbara, CA Edu) Author:Calehuff, Max Area:California Lines:74 Added:05/08/2011

Organization Criticizes Current U.S. Policy, Advocates Proper Treatment for Addiction

Santa Barbara's chapter of the national organization A New PATH -- Parents for Addiction Treatment and Healing -- will participate in the organization's new countrywide campaign to help end the nation's "War on Drugs" starting this Mother's Day.

The nonprofit activism group organized the Moms United to End the War on Drugs campaign to advocate for proper treatment of drug addictions instead of harsh legal ramifications for drug use.

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7 US CA: Edu: LTE: Columnist Misinforms On MephedroneWed, 16 Feb 2011
Source:Daily Nexus (UC Santa Barbara, CA Edu) Author:Nader, Alyssa Area:California Lines:52 Added:02/16/2011

Dear Nexus,

I'll begin by wishing you a happy Valentine's Day, and proceed by saying, "EW." I've been consistently annoyed by the fact that the drug column bores me by only ever discussing marijuana, but I have been accepting since speaking about other drugs in most any public forum is still considered very taboo and tends to get the speaker labeled as a menace to society/irresponsible/degenerate/etc.

However, yesterday's column was insultingly ignorant. Mephedrone is an extremely well-known research chemical that has recently received incredulous amounts of news coverage. One need not even venture to the dank, shady caves of Erowid or Bluelight to become enlightened as to the nature and effects of this chemical - a simple Google search would suffice. Your columnist obviously couldn't be bothered to take his bong out from between his legs to use his laptop to do so, and his uninformed comments about "horrible hallucinations" and "recurring psychosis" in "mild users" make this lack of knowledge and effort painfully obvious and extremely embarrassing.

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8 US CA: Edu: Column: Harmful Bath Salts Become New, Legal Substitute to Same, OldSun, 13 Feb 2011
Source:Daily Nexus (UC Santa Barbara, CA Edu) Author:McCarty, Kevin Area:California Lines:108 Added:02/14/2011

Two months ago, the DEA ruled a 12-month emergency ban on synthetic cannabis chemicals being sold legally in convenience stores nationwide under the moniker, "Spice." The emergence of Spice is a direct result of cannabis prohibition; nobody would buy fake weed if they could buy the real thing. Now that Spice has also been banned, another legal drug is popping up to fulfill the demand of drug consumers who are deprived of their natural birthright to the perfectly safe pleasure-chemicals provided by marijuana.

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9 US CA: Edu: Column: How Psychological Vampirism Can Totally Harsh Your MellowMon, 07 Feb 2011
Source:Daily Nexus (UC Santa Barbara, CA Edu) Author:McCarty, Kevin W. Area:California Lines:103 Added:02/07/2011

Every person has a drug of choice. Someone yesterday argued to me the point that "being drug-free is free," which is good advice to heed if one's demand for pleasure chemicals exceeds his supply of cash. Otherwise, the risk involved with consuming a drug is only a matter of balance.

When addiction is understood as a pattern of behavior, and the risks inherent in acquiring pleasure-molecules are placed on a spectrum of relativity, no man or woman is pure or guiltless. If many other people are negatively influenced by my pattern of behavior, then I am abusing my free will as a conscious human being. If my pattern of behavior tends to positively influence other people, then my action is just and needs no correction or remediation. That a drug is legal is no seal of safety.

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10 US CA: Edu: Column: Charismatic Leader Turns CondescendingMon, 31 Jan 2011
Source:Daily Nexus (UC Santa Barbara, CA Edu) Author:McCarty, Kevin W. Area:California Lines:96 Added:01/31/2011

President Barack Obama recently held a YouTube conference in which American citizens could ask questions about the topics they feel are important to the country. Of the top 100 questions, a whopping 99 were either in reference to the failed war on drugs or the legalization of marijuana. Despite the overwhelming emphasis that Americans placed on the destructive consequences of the war on drugs, our president took time out of his busy day to tell us what he's getting his wife for Valentine's Day and who he thinks will win the Super Bowl.

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11 US CA: Edu: Column: How I Learned to Stop Hating and Love GanjaMon, 22 Nov 2010
Source:Daily Nexus (UC Santa Barbara, CA Edu) Author:McCarty, Kevin W. Area:California Lines:147 Added:11/23/2010

Today's column is the last that I write as a student here at the University of Casual Sex & Beer, so I will babble in the form of a Life Thesis. In brief, I will articulate and defend what I call 'The Unalienable Human Right to Direct Access to the Natural Environment.' By virtue of the Law of Reality [that man will do what he can to survive], the Fact of Reality [the right to survive is not granted by state authority on any level], the Fact of History [drug plant species were domesticated by the human species before food crops], the Turn of Time [laws and rules reflect humanity's values at a specific point in time], and the River of Fate [in order to fulfill his potential man must have all freedoms, including liberty to destroy himself in the course of exploratory innovation]. I believe that all great poets, saints, philosophers, doctors, innovators and happy human beings have at one point or other shared some variant of this philosophy.

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12 US CA: Edu: Column: Potentials Of Cannabis Plant UndermineMon, 01 Nov 2010
Source:Daily Nexus (UC Santa Barbara, CA Edu) Author:McCarty, Kevin W. Area:California Lines:110 Added:11/01/2010

Opposition to Marajuana Use Proves Unfounded on Economic and Social Grounds

Marijuana should never have been illegal. There are many within the toking community who choose to devalue the significance of Prop 19 because marijuana is already accessible to people with a medical recommendation, but I believe these people fail to perceive the larger potential of the cannabis organism. The cannabis plant has more value to humanity than simply making us feel good. Hemp, the male counterpart to the female marijuana flower, is the key to America's industrial prosperity for life in the 21st century.

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13 US CA: Edu: Column: Prop 19 Puts the Pipe (and the Power) in Your HandsMon, 18 Oct 2010
Source:Daily Nexus (UC Santa Barbara, CA Edu) Author:McCarty, Kevin W. Area:California Lines:94 Added:10/18/2010

ATTENTION: If you have changed houses since your last time voting, you must re-register today, or else it might be your fault if weed doesn't become legal in two weeks. It's a piece of cake: Google "California election" and use the top Web site to fill out your name, then print it and mail it. If you bring it to the Daily Nexus office before 4:20 p.m., I'll even give you a stamp and mail it for you.

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14 US CA: Edu: PUB LTE: War On Marijuana Proves Lost CauseThu, 07 Oct 2010
Source:Daily Nexus (UC Santa Barbara, CA Edu) Author:Sharpe, Robert Area:California Lines:54 Added:10/09/2010

Dear Editor,

If health consequences determined drug laws instead of cultural norms, marijuana would be legal. Unlike alcohol, marijuana has never been shown to cause an overdose death, nor does it share the addictive properties of tobacco. Marijuana can be harmful if abused, but jail cells are inappropriate as health interventions and ineffective as deterrents.

The first marijuana laws were enacted in response to Mexican immigration during the early 1900s, despite opposition from the American Medical Association. Dire warnings that marijuana inspires homicidal rages have been counterproductive at best.

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15 US CA: Edu: OPED: Yes We Can: The Cannabis ChroniclesMon, 04 Oct 2010
Source:Daily Nexus (UC Santa Barbara, CA Edu) Author:McCarty, Kevin W. Area:California Lines:101 Added:10/04/2010

Last Thursday, Governor Schwarzenegger decriminalized marijuana. Somewhere in the chronic haze of my mind, I might have expected this to happen: The Terminator saves the kid from robots trying to take away his civil liberties -- or something like that. He was sent with a mission from the future, you know. After Google Earth becomes SkyNet and takes over operational command of the United States military, people are definitely going to want to smoke weed. Now they can without fear of arrest. Thanks, Arnold! I can say I've never been more proud of you in your term as Governor of California. Now on to the other $25 billion in the state budget shortfall...

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16 US CA: Edu: Judiciary Simplifies Unsettled Weed LawFri, 22 Jan 2010
Source:Daily Nexus (UC Santa Barbara, CA Edu) Author:Zeller, Jeremy Area:California Lines:87 Added:01/22/2010

The California Supreme Court overturned the limit on how much medical marijuana a patient can carry in a unanimous vote yesterday, ruling residents can have as much as personally necessary.

The court found the former limit of six mature plants and eight ounces of cannabis was not consistent with state law. California voters passed Proposition 215 in 1996, allowing residents to possess marijuana for medical use. Thursday's ruling puts a hold on a more than decade long legal debate about the meaning of the proposition, which said patients could possess whatever amount necessary for their "personal needs."

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17 US CA: Edu: Column: Fight The Power, Ignore The PoliceWed, 27 May 2009
Source:Daily Nexus (UC Santa Barbara, CA Edu) Author:Nightingale, Jonathan Area:California Lines:98 Added:05/28/2009

A couple of weeks ago, the Nexus published a column I wrote that offered the advice of "doing drugs instead of drinking." ("Do Drugs Instead of Drinking," Daily Nexus, May 12.) It was supposed to be a satirical column in response to the local government's effort to curtail drinking by imposing specific laws for Isla Vista - like the noise ordinance and recent beach ban. I thought it would be evident to anyone with the ability to read that this was my goal when I suggested you go do a bunch of coke to keep the party going once the cops break it up at midnight.

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18 US CA: Edu: OPED: Students Obsess Over Drugs, AlcoholThu, 21 May 2009
Source:Daily Nexus (UC Santa Barbara, CA Edu) Author:Dyer, Melanie Area:California Lines:73 Added:05/22/2009

Throughout my career as a UCSB student I have developed a bit of a habit of picking up the Daily Nexus before my first class and attempting to complete the crossword by the end of my school day. It's a ritual I enjoy that keeps me centered and gives me something to do during my breaks or during a particularly dull biology lecture. The crosswords are often found near the end of the paper, often adjacent to the Opinion section and so I frequently find myself reading the opinions of my fellow Gauchos. That is, I used to.

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19 US CA: Edu: Column: New Czar Will Change PolicyTue, 19 May 2009
Source:Daily Nexus (UC Santa Barbara, CA Edu) Author:Nightingale, Jonathan Area:California Lines:77 Added:05/19/2009

A week or two ago, the United States' legislature overwhelmingly voted to confirm the Obama Administration's nomination of former Seattle Police Chief Gil Kerlikowske to be our new Drug Czar. As the head of the White House Office of Drug Control Policy, Mr. Kerlikowske is the top bureaucrat involved in this nation's War on Drugs. Despite the 91-1 confirmation vote, he did face some criticism, which stemmed mostly from the fact that he was in charge of policing Seattle. The northwestern state is host to a number of progressive drug policies, including the designation of marijuana as the lowest police priority, as well as home to the annual Hempfest "protestival," where tens of thousands of marijuana enthusiasts come to celebrate the herb and protest its prohibition. This has led some people to criticize Obama's pick. However, it was apparently clear to Congress that he was just following the voter-approved laws in Seattle.

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20 US CA: Column: Do Drugs Instead Of DrinkingTue, 12 May 2009
Source:Daily Nexus (UC Santa Barbara, CA Edu) Author:Nightingale, Jonathon Area:California Lines:78 Added:05/12/2009

The I.V. Foot Patrol recently lead the charge to ban drinking on the beaches in Isla Vista and, through a massive dissemination of fear, convinced everyone that Floatopia would end all life as we know it. In reality, this ban just gives them six months to practice the only thing they're good at: enforcing alcohol laws. Have you ever had your house broken into or something stolen from you? The majority of people I've spoken to have found that the police here could care less about you or the crimes you have been a victim of... unless of course you're holding a red cup. With that said, it is clear that the best way to say "Fuck You!" to these ridiculous new laws and the leaders who imposed them upon us is to get even more fucked up while simply making it appear like you're playing by the rules.

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21 US CA: Edu: Column: US Drug Policy Under ObamaTue, 05 May 2009
Source:Daily Nexus (UC Santa Barbara, CA Edu) Author:Nightingale, Jon Area:California Lines:79 Added:05/05/2009

Last week, the American media celebrated President Obama's 100th day in office, an occasion that they have been shamelessly over-hyping for a while now. So how has this guy, who promised profound change and supported rethinking some aspects of drug policy during his campaign, performed in his first 100 days?

Even before the campaign, Obama admitted to marijuana and cocaine use in his younger days as a top law student at Harvard. Personally, I find this hard to believe because I'm pretty sure you have to be a huge nerd to get into Harvard Law, but this could also be proof that these illicit drugs aren't all that bad. Nonetheless, his comfort level with disclosing this information showed early on that he was able to be frank when discussing the taboo subject of drugs.

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22 US CA: Edu: OPED: Maybe Legalization Would Not Be So BadFri, 01 May 2009
Source:Daily Nexus (UC Santa Barbara, CA Edu) Author:Sanosa, David Area:California Lines:52 Added:05/01/2009

Like most arguments against the legalization of cannabis, Shaeffer Bannigan's was erroneous and deluded ("The Case Against Legalizing Marijuana," Daily Nexus, April 27). First things first, I have some refuting to do:

Citing continued underage use of weed as a potential crisis is hardly valid, as the demand from underage users will be satiated through people who can obtain it legally, the gravity of which is not the same as through wholly illegal means.

Obtaining cannabis from the government and growing one's own supply can take mass manufacturing interference out of the equation.

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23 US CA: Edu: PUB LTE: Take a Puff and Stop Hating on WeedTue, 28 Apr 2009
Source:Daily Nexus (UC Santa Barbara, CA Edu) Author:Novak, Michael Area:California Lines:54 Added:04/29/2009

David Sforza needs to roll a j and sit this one out because he did a poor job of describing his fellow Santa Barbarians ("A Joint Rolled Is a Body Buried," Daily Nexus, April 22). I understand that the drug war happening in Mexico right now is a very sad and scary event, but Sforza should know that we stoners do our part to take money OUT of the hands of Mexican drug cartels. How? Californians simply buy decent pot.

By his vague, though admittedly accurate, mention of our "state of euphoria," I can tell that Sforza has never smoked any Mexican shag. It's shitty, to be honest. Mexico has neither the climate nor the invested care to grow any good pot. Additionally, the process of transporting marijuana out of Mexico takes its toll on the quality of the product. It can be victim to hasty curing, intense compaction and is sometimes hidden in other goods which produce strong odors to hide the smell of the weed, which ultimately leaves the bud smelling like whatever it was hidden in (fertilizer, anyone?). It's called Mexican dirt-weed for a reason.

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24 US CA: Edu: Column: The Case Against Legalizing MarijuanaMon, 27 Apr 2009
Source:Daily Nexus (UC Santa Barbara, CA Edu) Author:Bannigan, Shaeffer Area:California Lines:88 Added:04/27/2009

Many people blame the government for the war on drugs because the government refuses to legalize the drug. But the war on drugs isn't as shortsighted as proponents of legalization would like to think. Legalizing marijuana will not solve all of our drug war problems and certainly won't make our country a better place to live.

Advocates of legalization propositions say that a federally regulated marijuana market will drive the cost of marijuana down, decrease the crime rate and thus decrease the wasted efforts put forth by the Drug Enforcement Administration. The federal government spends billions of dollars each year in an effort to undermine drug distribution throughout the country.

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25 US CA: EDU: Column: A Joint Rolled Is A Body BuriedWed, 22 Apr 2009
Source:Daily Nexus (UC Santa Barbara, CA Edu) Author:Sforza, David Area:California Lines:97 Added:04/22/2009

There is a new blood diamond in international politics.

This new product is enjoyed by 25 million Americans on a regular basis.

It has led to the death of 6,300 people in one country alone last year. In one city, 1,600 have already been killed this year. Many have been beheaded and placed on display for all to see. The country with the largest problem is becoming the kidnapping capital of the world, and is one of two countries our government has classified as being in threat of complete government collapse.

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26 US CA: Edu: NORML Hosts Marijuana EventMon, 06 Apr 2009
Source:Daily Nexus (UC Santa Barbara, CA Edu) Author:Kiefer, Nico Area:California Lines:55 Added:04/07/2009

Isla Vista residents packed into Anisq' Oyo' Park yesterday for the fifth annual Joint Rolling Competition and daylong festival in celebration of all things green and sticky.

The event, hosted by the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws, capped off a weekend of reveling throughout I.V. and saw several hundred students, vendors and marijuana enthusiasts relaxing in the sunshine to watch the festival's main event - the joint rolling contest. The competition consisted of several categories - fattest, fastest, freestyle and primo categories for both joints and blunts, and a joint-only contest for medical marijuana and one-handed specialists.

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27 US CA: Edu: Column: Pot Addiction Has Its PitfallsMon, 24 Nov 2008
Source:Daily Nexus (UC Santa Barbara, CA Edu) Author:Witcoff, Michael Area:California Lines:90 Added:11/24/2008

The time has come where those of you who, like me, were straight-edge all through high school are probably discovering what joys and pains recreational drugs can add to your life. You, like me, may find that marijuana in particular happens to be a fantastic remedy for most of life's bitter woes, including stress from classes and good ol'-fashioned boredom.

It is you, fellow lovers of the green, who I hope to reach today. I must warn you, as great as pot is, it might not take too long before you find yourself smoking just a little more than you'd like. Maybe you're picking up 20 sacks every other day or scheduling your classes around when you can get high. Either way, there comes a point at which it is simply too much, and this is the issue I'm about to tackle. Do not let people tell you that pot is not an addictive drug - these people tend to be those who have no experience with such things or don't smoke quite enough to reach that point.

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28 US CA: Edu: Column: Acid Accentuates Your MindTue, 04 Nov 2008
Source:Daily Nexus (UC Santa Barbara, CA Edu) Author:Coffman, Alex Area:California Lines:93 Added:11/04/2008

Proper LSD Use Helps Open the Floodgates of Perception

"If you take acid, you can see God."

What is this strange, magical, wondrous substance? It is the catalyst for the summer of love. One of the most potent drugs known to mankind. Greatly misunderstood, yet a key to The Doors of Perception. Exploited by the CIA in a secret mind-control program. A physical connection to the spirit. One of the greatest inventions of mankind.

Lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD) is often called a hallucinogen by the uninformed. Those in the know call it a psychedelic. I call it the dissolver and creator of reality. Yes, LSD can create hallucinations, but labeling it a hallucinogen is like calling the sun "a thing that makes light." Psychedelics allow the user to connect to states of "non-ordinary reality." They have the potential for creating ego-shattering, soul-cleansing, spirit-soaring, life-altering states, insights, connections and deconstructions. Being on LSD is like letting the director of consciousness go on vacation. No longer will thoughts, emotions, sights, sounds, patterns happen in a logical progression of time. Suddenly, things become much simpler as you realize that flowers you pass by every day are actually the most beautiful expression of creation ever. Gone is the need or the urge to understand, categorize, explain and contain things. Exuberant happiness billows and raises you up to the heavens.

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29 US CA: Edu: Column: War on Weed Won't WinTue, 28 Oct 2008
Source:Daily Nexus (UC Santa Barbara, CA Edu) Author:Coffman, Alex Area:California Lines:98 Added:10/28/2008

Government's Attack on Weed Is Wrong and Misguided

America. It is the supposed land of the free. A shining beacon of democracy unto the world, a place founded upon the ideals of great men - -- men who fought to escape tyranny and oppression. Men who were not afraid to stand up for their own truth when equality and liberty were threatened by an oppressive regime. These men believed it was not the government that should rule the people, but the people who should rule the government.

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30 US CA: Edu: Column: Bong Rips Cure Cancer?Tue, 07 Oct 2008
Source:Daily Nexus (UC Santa Barbara, CA Edu) Author:Hoffman, Alex Area:California Lines:92 Added:10/07/2008

The Truth About Weed the Feds Don't Want You to Know

You read that right, my sleepy-eyed stoners. Cannabis CURES cancer. Okay, that is a bit of propaganda wrapped up in overstatement. But guess what? It is our turn to spread the real propaganda of ganja. The thing that the government, religious fanatics and our parents alike will hate the most about our propaganda is that it is full of truth.

According to "The Cannabible 3," in 1974, a study funded by the United States Federal Government found evidence demonstrating that Tetrahydrocannabinol, the most active cannabinoid in cannabis, reduces growth rates of three kinds of cancer. The assholes in the Drug Enforcement Administration office decided it might be bad for business if the public knew this. No major media outlets reported the story and research was halted in that area.

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31 US CA: Edu: Column: Cannabis 1A: Introduction to SmokingSat, 30 Aug 2008
Source:Daily Nexus (UC Santa Barbara, CA Edu) Author:Coffman, Alex Area:California Lines:82 Added:09/01/2008

Gather 'round, my bleary eyed friends. Put down that lighter and clear the smoky haze from in front of your eyes. Or, alternatively, pick up that joint, find some fire, puff away and read on. The weed guru is in.

Hello freshies! I'm betting there are a few of you who haven't yet had a chance to meet our good friend Lady Jane. You're in college now - - lucky you! Time to explore some new smoke-filled territories. Smoking your first bowl will be an exciting, novel experience. However, things could turn awkward as newbies and veterans alike violate stoner etiquette. Don't worry, I have the 411 to keep you suave any time you have a date with Mary Jane.

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32 US CA: Edu: PUB LTE: Bearman Crusades For End To Pointless War On DrugsFri, 30 May 2008
Source:Daily Nexus (UC Santa Barbara, CA Edu) Author:Tribble, Thomas Area:California Lines:61 Added:05/30/2008

Editor, Daily Nexus,

There are many reasons to vote for Dr. David Bearman for 3rd District supervisor. His views on the budgetary impact of current drug policy are just one reason.

Dr. Dave Bearman has been a crusader for years to reform American drug policy. His book Demons, Discrimination and Dollars: A Brief History of the Origins of American Drug Laws recognizes the so-called "War on Drugs" is really a war on minorities and the underclass.

This war has been a drain on the public coffers since introduced by President Nixon in 1972. In the process it has ripped to shreds the First, Fourth, Fifth, Ninth and 10th Amendments to the Constitution while winking at the Hatch Act.

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33 US CA: Edu: Methamphetamine Ravages SB CountyTue, 15 May 2007
Source:Daily Nexus (UC Santa Barbara, CA Edu) Author:Ibbetson, Casey Area:California Lines:221 Added:05/17/2007

Deadly Drug's Threat Become Crystal Clear

Methamphetamine has cooked in Santa Barbara County drug laboratories for decades, yet its current prevalence trumps even the days when Andy Warhol's cohort Edie Sedgwick made her meth-fueled romps through Isla Vista's streets.

It is the drug of choice in the county, and accounts for a significant portion of its crime, particularly in North County. Its popularity maintains a stronghold in I.V. and at UCSB, and it can still be found in the homes of 40-year-old dealers on Abrego Road or in the dorms of 18-year-old freshmen on campus.

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34 US CA: Edu: County Deals With Drugs, CasinosWed, 14 Feb 2007
Source:Daily Nexus (UC Santa Barbara, CA Edu) Author:Cooper, Daniel Area:California Lines:82 Added:02/15/2007

Methamphetamines and gambling were the primary focuses of yesterday's County Board of Supervisors meeting.

In response to increasing public awareness of Santa Barbara's growing methamphetamine problem, several guest speakers from throughout the county addressed the Board to discuss their encounters with the drug. The speakers - which included a local doctor, Santa Maria's chief of police and a local mother recovering from long-term meth addiction - spoke about the negative impact of the drug on the community as well as its spike in use in recent years.

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35 US CA: Edu: Column: Freedom Territory: Our Government's War On DrugsFri, 27 Oct 2006
Source:Daily Nexus (UC Santa Barbara, CA Edu) Author:Hedlund, Eric Area:California Lines:89 Added:10/30/2006

The War on Drugs is over! Pretty much over. Mission accomplished, people! Pretty close to accomplished that is. Good work people. I've prepared a speech for the Decider in Chief:

Good People of 'Merica. Today's a victory for freedom in our territory. Now we can start over with clean feet. In this battle, we have fought for the cause of liberty and for the peace of the world. I'm pretty proud of us. Because of you, our nation is more secure. Because of you, the evil hippies have fallen and former stoners are free.

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36 US CA: Edu: OPED: UCSB Officials Should Stay in School, Out of I.V.Fri, 19 May 2006
Source:Daily Nexus (UC Santa Barbara, CA Edu) Author:Coffman, Alex Area:California Lines:105 Added:05/20/2006

Zachariah Hubbell got many things wrong in his article, "UCSB Should Punish Serious Crimes Committed in I.V." (Daily Nexus, May 17). The article discusses the Campus Regulations Review Committee's proposal to punish students for their criminal behavior out in I.V. Here is its first deceiving statement: "The Associate Dean of Students promised students that administrators would not put drug and alcohol offenses in the hot seat." Well, perhaps the student body should also know that Dean was quoted by the Nexus as saying, "What we're proposing to do is include explicitly arson and prohibiting alcohol to minors and sales or provision of illegal substances to other people," They should also know that Vice Chancellor of Student Affairs Michael Young stated, "We're only looking at egregious provisions of alcohol to minors." Seems to me that the people in this committee are quite interested in busting people for alcohol and other drugs.

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