cannabisnews.com: NORML's Weekly News Bulletin - April 12, 2007










  NORML's Weekly News Bulletin - April 12, 2007

Posted by CN Staff on April 12, 2007 at 09:49:44 PT
Weekly Press Release  
Source: NORML  

Denver: Marijuana Arrests Increase Despite Voter-Approved Initiative Abolishing City's Pot PenaltiesApril 12, 2007 - Denver, CO, USADenver, CO: Marijuana arrests in Denver increased more than 10 percent from 2005 to 2006, despite the recent passage of a municipal ordinance calling on police to cease penalizing adults who possess small amounts of pot.
Non-felony pot arrests rose from fewer than 2,200 in 2005 ­- when 54 percent of Denver voters approved I-100, a citywide ordinance abolishing civil and criminal penalties for the possession of up to one ounce of marijuana by citizens age 21 and older -­ to approximately 2,500 in 2006."The Denver Police Department has done the exact opposite of what the voters demanded and has gone out of its way to arrest even more adults than ever before," said SAFER (Safer Alternative For Enjoyable Recreation) Director Mason Tvert, who coordinated the I-100 initiative. "Perhaps even more disturbing is the lack of interest among Denver's elected officials ­- particularly our mayor ­- in supporting the people who elected them."Similar voter-approved efforts to 'deprioritize' marijuana law enforcement in several cities have led to a decrease in marijuana possession arrests - most notably in Seattle.Among those arrested by Denver police on minor pot violations, 32 percent were African Americans. According to census data, African-Americans comprise only 11 percent of Denver's population.Nationally, a 2005 NORML Foundation study reported that although African-American adults account for fewer than 12 percent of all marijuana users, they comprise 23 percent of those arrested annually on pot possession charges. A previous review of marijuana arrest data by NORML in 2000 found that African-Americans are busted for marijuana possession at rates twice those of whites in 64 percent of US counties.Most recently, a 2007 study by the National Development Research Institute reported that 85 percent of the defendants arrested in New York City for the crime of possessing marijuana in the fifth degree were either African-American or Hispanic.For more information, please contact Allen St. Pierre, NORML Executive Director, at (202) 483-5500, or visit: http://www.saferchoice.orgDL: http://norml.org/index.cfm?Group_ID=7238NORML Affiliates To Protest Pot Prohibition On Tax DayApril 12, 2007 - Washington, DC, USAWashington, DC: On Monday, April 16, 2007, NORML chapters around the country will hold protests at their local post-offices to call on elected officials to tax and regulate cannabis in a manner similar to alcohol and tobacco.      "No day is more appropriate for America's citizens to protest their government's criminalization of cannabis than tax day," said NORML Executive Director Allen St. Pierre. "Cannabis consumers may be the only community in America who are demanding the federal government to tax and regulate our product of choice."      Replacing marijuana prohibition with a system of taxation and regulation similar to alcohol could produce combined savings and tax revenues as high as $14 billion per year, St. Pierre said ­- citing a 2005 study by Boston University economist Jeffrey Miron.      A 2006 study reported that cannabis ranks as the top cash crop in twelve states and is worth more than $1 billion per year in five states: California, Tennessee, Kentucky, Hawaii, and Washington.      Most recently, California's Board of Equalization announced that it will seek to collect taxes on the state's 150 to 200 medicinal cannabis dispensaries.       'This tax day, when millions of Americans are lamenting filing their paperwork with the IRS, federal officials should remember that at least one community is standing up and demanding to be counted," St. Pierre said.      For more information, please contact Allen St. Pierre, NORML Executive Director, at (202) 483-5500, or visit: http://www.norml.orgDL: http://norml.org/index.cfm?Group_ID=7237African-American Mothers More Likely To Be Tested For Drugs, Study SaysApril 12, 2007 - New York, NY, USANew York, NY: African-American women and their newborns are more likely to be drug tested than are other women, even after controlling for sociodemographic and clinical factors, according to a study published in the current issue of the Journal of Women's Health.       Investigators at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York City analyzed factors associated with the decision to drug test women with live births over a one-year period in a single hospital. Of the 8,487 mothers, 244 mother-newborn pairs (three percent) were tested for illegal drugs. Researchers reported that "black women and their newborns were 1.5 times more likely to be tested for illicit drugs as non-black women," after controlling for obstetrical conditions and sociodemographic factors, such as single marital status or a lack of health insurance.      "There was no association between race and a positive toxicology result," investigators determined.      In many states, mothers who test positive for cannabis during or prior to childbirth can lose custody of their child and/or face criminal charges.      A 1990 study published in the New England Journal of Medicine reported that African-American mothers who tested positive for illicit drugs were ten times more likely to be reported to child protective services than white and Hispanic counterparts.      For more information, please contact Paul Armentano, NORML Senior Policy Analyst, at paul norml.org Full text of the study, "The effect of race on provider decisions to test for illicit drug use in the peripartum setting," appears in the Journal of Women's Health. DL: http://norml.org/index.cfm?Group_ID=7239Source: NORML Foundation (DC)Published: April 12, 2007Copyright: 2007 NORML Contact: norml norml.org Website: http://www.norml.org/CannabisNews NORML Archiveshttp://cannabisnews.com/news/list/NORML.shtml 

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Comment #40 posted by FoM on April 14, 2007 at 06:25:26 PT
JustGetnBy 
You're very welcome. Being understanding is one of the most important emotions that we need to cultivate or we might as well throw in the towel and let the angry people rule. That's just not acceptable to me.
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Comment #39 posted by JustGetnBy on April 13, 2007 at 22:53:37 PT
All it takes is LOVE
 FOM and my C-News family, bless you all for your open minds and hearts.             Peace & Love  JGB              
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Comment #38 posted by FoM on April 13, 2007 at 14:59:23 PT

JustGetnBy
Thank you. It seems that change even to this day isn't accepted by the powers that be. I believe the Hippies helped start the movement about alternative medicine, earth concerns, and so much more. They pulled off Woodstock and it worked. It scared them that young people weren't willing to wait for things to change and the older politicians didn't like it. The young people are getting on board with Obama so maybe there is hope that they might speak out, stand and vote in 08. It does my heart good to see this happening now. Thanks for sharing. You are loved and I'm sure you know that.
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Comment #37 posted by Hope on April 13, 2007 at 11:59:08 PT

This is so not right....
African-American Mothers More Likely To Be Tested For Drugs, Study SaysApril 12, 2007 - New York, NY, USANew York, NY: African-American women and their newborns are more likely to be drug tested than are other women, even after controlling for sociodemographic and clinical factors, according to a study published in the current issue of the Journal of Women's Health.Investigators at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York City analyzed factors associated with the decision to drug test women with live births over a one-year period in a single hospital. Of the 8,487 mothers, 244 mother-newborn pairs (three percent) were tested for illegal drugs. Researchers reported that "black women and their newborns were 1.5 times more likely to be tested for illicit drugs as non-black women," after controlling for obstetrical conditions and sociodemographic factors, such as single marital status or a lack of health insurance."There was no association between race and a positive toxicology result," investigators determined.In many states, mothers who test positive for cannabis during or prior to childbirth can lose custody of their child and/or face criminal charges.A 1990 study published in the New England Journal of Medicine reported that African-American mothers who tested positive for illicit drugs were ten times more likely to be reported to child protective services than white and Hispanic counterparts.For more information, please contact Paul Armentano, NORML Senior Policy Analyst, at paul norml.orgFull text of the study, "The effect of race on provider decisions to test for illicit drug use in the peripartum setting," appears in the Journal of Women's Health.
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Comment #36 posted by ekim on April 13, 2007 at 11:46:04 PT

JGB good going -- your in good company
 Howard Wooldridge www.leap.cc/— April 13, 2007   9:43 am Humor of the Week: After my presentation to the Canton, Ohio Rotary their President announced to the 100 members present I was to receive two gifts from the club. As I received a box and an envelope, a member shouted out, ‘Is it marijuana?!' As the members roared in laughter, I quickly opened the box to show it was a beautiful Rotary medallion. A dozen members later came up to express their support for the LEAP position and thanked me for coming. Like Ohio State football, I created a cloud of dust and moved the ball three yards on our way to the goal line. What a Memory: At the general request of MPP, I called Texas state Representative Debbie Riddle (R)* to urge her to vote for a bill to allow Texas officers to issue a ticket for simple possession of marijuana. Speaking to the aide who deals with criminal justice, I stated my reasons. He told me he would pass it on to the boss. He said he remembered me from 2003 (as the retired cop who rode a horse), when I worked for NORML and pushed the same bill. It must be the hat!I spent the bulk of this week in the Charleston, WV area speaking to five Rotaries.  In my audiences were the First Lady of The Mountain State, the Secretary of State, three House Delegates and other elected officials. Several came up after the talk to voice their agreement that current policy is ineffective and that I had given them food for thought. One delegate asked for specific, less-than-end prohibition ideas that could be introduced in 2008 and still allow for their re-election. As you may already know, Governor Richardson of New Mexico signed the ‘Good Samaritan 911 Call' bill last week. This first-in-the-nation bill to save the lives of those dying of an alcohol or drug overdose owes its passage to the incredible work of Reena Szczepanski of the Drug Policy Alliance. I am thrilled beyond words that, when adopted in all 50 states, thousands of lives will be saved each year.*I remembered that Rep. Riddle was not sure which way she would vote in 2003.

http://blog.leap.cc/
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Comment #35 posted by whig on April 13, 2007 at 11:00:24 PT

Ghost Dance
Historic still images and video accompanied by the song Ghost Dance by Robbie Robertson & The Red Road Ensemble from their recording Music for the Native Americans.http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wTY2pmKguDg
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Comment #34 posted by whig on April 13, 2007 at 10:59:25 PT

JustGetnBy
Thank you and God bless you.
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Comment #33 posted by Hope on April 13, 2007 at 10:24:46 PT

JustGetnBy
We love you and are glad you are one of us. You know that.(The angels rejoice in Heaven over even one "sinner" who is saved. We rejoice at C-News over even one Prohibitionist that is "saved".)Rejoice.I like that word.
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Comment #32 posted by Toker00 on April 13, 2007 at 10:20:42 PT

JGB
I love you Brother. FoM, Hope, I'm sorry I misunderstood. As you can see, we all speak better when we speak for OURSELVES. Sorry.Toke.
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Comment #31 posted by Toker00 on April 13, 2007 at 10:14:54 PT

FoM
"We are watching the series Roots on tv and it's been many years since I have seen it and it is powerful. Why did they act that way towards the black people? How does anyone ever think they could own another person and abuse them just to fuel their ego?"FoM, why do the Elite think they can enslave the entire world? Same mentality. Godlessness. Ignoring the Will of God. Placing themselves ABOVE other Men. Yes. RULE OF EGO.Love ya.Toke.
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Comment #30 posted by JustGetnBy on April 13, 2007 at 10:09:52 PT

Slpainin myself  Comment # 14
  Friends, I was affirming that what rchander was saying, from my personal experience, was true. When we think of the political climate in America in the 60s we have to remember the 40s and 50s. I was born during world war 2, Ozzie and Harriet, Leave it to Beaver were prime time television shows. It was (we thought) a much simpler time. Then along came the "flower children", and they looked and behaved in ways that we had never seen before. They were not a threat, but you didn't want your kid hanging out with them. They dressed funny, they talked funny, they wore their hair too long,hell, most of them wouldn't even work to feed themselves. A great many hippies didn't bathe. I think what frightened me most is that the hippies did not respect the values most us were raised to belive were American values. (Now I must speak in some generalities to illustrate my point, so please understand I am not branding all:) I think what frightened most was the disrespect they showed to family, by leaving home to live on the street or in communes, we couldn't understand.  I think the hippies would have been pretty much tolerated had they come along at a different time, but several other events changed everything.
The polarization of the American people against the Vietnam war and the BlackPanther party. The BlackPanther Party changed America with their 
violent rhetoric, and that bled into the hippy community. Now the Police were "PIGS" not cops. Pigs were to be slaughtered not respected. Police had to be on guard, as the Black Panther Party were assasinating Police on the streets, The Police were no better, as they met violence with violence and as sure as the sun comes up in the morning, violence begets violence. The Symbionese Liberation Army and the kidnapping of Patty Hearst raised things to a new level of violence. I was at Berkley, Stanford, half a dozen Junior colleges in the Bay Area in the 60s and 70s as a polce during the Vietnam war protests, (read riots for several). The hippie movement was co-opted b y the Vietnam War movement, with dashes of the Black Panther Party thrown in for good measure, and if that didn't cause you some concern, you simply weren't paying attention. In the end, if you embrace hate and violence you become hate and violence. I quit being a Deputy Sheriff after 15 years, 5 years away from retirement age because I could no longer in good conscience do the things the job required.  I am in my late 60s now, my heart is tie-died, I wear a pony tail, and cannabis is my medicine and sacrament. I offer no apologies, nor seek
absolution, I ask only for peace.PS: When Congress passed the Controlled substance act in 1972 we all had a big laugh in the squad room over marijuana and mushrooms being rated more dangerous than heroin and speed. We knew it was bullsht even then. By the time I left the new guys weren't laughing, and I was a dinosaur.
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Comment #29 posted by whig on April 13, 2007 at 09:45:18 PT

Hope
Pain takes a long time to heal, it can even be a sign of healing, and sometimes it might be worse than other times. If you look back over a longer time, you can compare to the week or month or year before to observe progress. I hope your daughter makes a full recovery.
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Comment #28 posted by whig on April 13, 2007 at 09:41:49 PT

JustGetnBy
Your forgiveness is assured, will you tell us what changed your mind and how you would suggest we address others similar to yourself who have not yet done so?
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Comment #27 posted by whig on April 13, 2007 at 09:39:35 PT

Hope
I'm glad to hear your daughter is getting well. Almost seems miraculous, so many people recovering lately.
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Comment #26 posted by Hope on April 13, 2007 at 08:01:27 PT

JustGetnBy
I'm not mad either! That would be crazy! I'm rejoicing that he is with us...whether he joined us twenty years ago or last week.I'd so much like to hear the story of how he got from there to here.
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Comment #25 posted by Hope on April 13, 2007 at 07:54:00 PT

Whig
That particular CD has so much information and guidance in it. I treasure all of them, but I most enjoy setting my day to that reading.Doctor says my daughter is doing amazingly well. Now she's healing faster than anyone he's seen. He says it's great and to keep doing whatever she's doing. Liquid bone has formed in the metal cages of the device they put in, but it won't harden for some time yet. She's still in pain and walks slow, but she's hanging in there.
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Comment #24 posted by FoM on April 13, 2007 at 06:00:23 PT

Toker00
I am not upset about what JustGetnBy said at all. I just am trying so hard to understand what caused people to hate Hippies so much back then. We are watching the series Roots on tv and it's been many years since I have seen it and it is powerful. Why did they act that way towards the black people? How does anyone every think they could own another person and abuse them just to fuel their ego? I just want to know where the anger came from that hurt so many people. Hippies were the good guys and they were hated and abused by the system and I don't understand why.
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Comment #23 posted by Toker00 on April 13, 2007 at 03:29:10 PT

Woh
I believe JustGetnBy was offering a testemony about being blind in the sixties. I believe JustGetnBy was being sarcastic in his comment about "destroying our way of life." He is being honest and saying he now sees this was not right at the time he was doing it. This sounds like a heart felt apology from him to all of us, and I ACCEPT. Thank you JustGetnBy. Love. But what the hell does an old hippie know.Toke.
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Comment #22 posted by whig on April 13, 2007 at 02:41:38 PT

Hope
How is your daughter doing?
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Comment #21 posted by whig on April 13, 2007 at 01:47:02 PT

Hope
Heb. 6:7-87 For the earth which drinks in the rain that often comes upon it, and bears herbs useful for those by whom it is cultivated, receives blessing from God; 8 but if it bears thorns and briers, it is rejected and near to being cursed, whose end is to be burned.All the parables speak of this same thing, we know the truth because we test it for safety and taste it for experience. None of us are any greater than another, if we choose the good and abstain from poisoning. You need hardly ask which we are, and you know. But I will not claim to be free of any fault, none of us can claim perfection in human terms, though in the larger plan we are all perfect, even the ones that fall away, though their repentance could be lost for a lifetime, they cannot fail to transform in time. All is preserved in the mind of God.
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Comment #20 posted by FoM on April 12, 2007 at 21:05:38 PT

JustGetnBy 
I appreciate your honesty and in no way and being critical of you but that question is one that would help me to understand why Hippies are called Hippie Commie Pinko Fags or something like that.
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Comment #19 posted by FoM on April 12, 2007 at 21:02:44 PT

JustGetnBy 
I would like to know why did you think that Hippies were destroying your way of life back then. What was so wrong with Hippies and their dreams? I am not a Hippie and I never was but my heart is tie dyed.
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Comment #18 posted by Hope on April 12, 2007 at 19:53:28 PT

JustGetnBy
Can you share with us when you changed your mind about the War on Drugs? I am assuming, of course, that you did.
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Comment #17 posted by Hope on April 12, 2007 at 19:46:37 PT

GCW
Been thinking about you and things you've said a lot today.I'm listening to favorite CD. Steven B. Stevens NIV New Testament Disc 13 Collosians 3 through Hebrews 6, with repeat on. Of course I think about you, Whig,when hearing Paul's letter to the Hebrews.
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Comment #16 posted by The GCW on April 12, 2007 at 19:25:29 PT

KUCINICH
KUCINICH is the real deal. No guessing.Against cannabis prohibition. ...the only Prez. candidate who out right states so and includes it on His platform.Against the war and has been from before the start. Has a plan out.
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Comment #15 posted by rchandar on April 12, 2007 at 19:20:33 PT:

JustGetnBy
64-77? Dirty Harry, Streets of San Francisco, Starsky & Hutch.Looks like you were at the epicenter of how police were portrayed.It's not saying all cops are bad cops; impossible for me to say it. Bring in the issue of drugs though: most of 'em are in that area.Not Kojak, though. If I remember he was NY. And Remington Files and Chips were LA. But SF was very, very important: it was a time when we lay citizens were assured that SF was a city of international crime mafias and deranged killers. The "hippy-dippy" stuff was completely airbrushed out of the picture.I'm still an Eastwood fan sometimes, but I like his Westerns better. Best line, from "Sudden Impact":Senior Cop: You know who you're talkin' to? Huh? You know my record?Dirty Harry: Yeah. You're a legend in your own mind.The only thing that will resolve the problem and put police back in charge of the public trust, however, is CHANGING THESE LAWS. We've got millions of people out there, many of them children, who're basically functionless, and we can't tell them anything because they feel they have to conform. Nothing justifies the current legal situation in most states. To send a guy to jail for a year or two just for smoking a joint can never make any rational sense. Everything in the profile must be cooked, filled with lies. 
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Comment #14 posted by JustGetnBy on April 12, 2007 at 18:37:27 PT

rchandar Post #12
 You ring a true bell. I was a deputy sheriff in ca. from 64 
through 77. I worked in the Bay Area, so I was hip deep in the Govt.counter-culture clash and the Vietnam War protests.The sad thing is.
 
 I was one the guys throwing tear gas at the dirty hippies that were destroying our way of life.Even sadder is that I thought I was doing the right thing, the American thing. Mea Culpa!Peace and Love    
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Comment #13 posted by Toker00 on April 12, 2007 at 15:51:57 PT

O I C
Thanks for the heads up on Wildmon, whig. What a jerk.toke.
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Comment #12 posted by rchandar on April 12, 2007 at 13:19:54 PT:

observer
many police see themselves as honest, hardworking citizens who uphold the law.but it's hard to argue with you. give a guy who has only a GED a job paying him 60 grand, full benefits and retirement, the unqualified adulation of middle-class citizens and kids everywhere, and a duty to fight the evil elements of society. loyalty personified.sometimes my heart rages at these f $kers. I've seen their houses: brand new, 300K houses, boats, new cars. and if 60K doesn't satisfy your gluttony, there's always the money one can make from seizures or from padding arrests to look better.you also get fringe benefits. Meaning, of course, when you get in trouble, the US Attorneys may represent you. You will be exonerated 99.9 percent of the time, even when you're significantly in the wrong. All for a guy who doesn't know philosophy, can't do calculus, never had to take any real kind of "exam" testing his/her knowledge. you get to lecture people on morals and justify easily sending people to "The Big House." Such wonderful people are our "law enforcement.""The Middle-Class Dream" today is actually: how do I earn more money than the cops?
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Comment #11 posted by whig on April 12, 2007 at 12:12:44 PT

Wear sunscreen
This was a commencement address given by Kurt Vonnegut, set here to music. Kurt Vonnegut died yesterday.http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tk0WiNUhyjw
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Comment #10 posted by whig on April 12, 2007 at 12:05:57 PT

Presidential straw poll in comment #1
That is being run by the ANTI- Donald Wildmon.
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Comment #9 posted by whig on April 12, 2007 at 12:04:24 PT

Toker00
AFA: American Family Association -- Donald Wildmon's group.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Donald_Wildmon
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Comment #8 posted by observer on April 12, 2007 at 11:51:35 PT

Police only obey laws ...
"The Denver Police Department has done the exact opposite of what the voters demanded and has gone out of its way to arrest even more adults than ever before,"I'm getting the idea that police only obey laws which give them more power. They forget, don't understand, won't understand, can't hear, won't hear, etc., laws that restrict police powers. After you peel away the platitudes about saving the children, protecting and serving, 'If you saw the ____ (abuse/car crashes/human degradation) that I have seen,' -type rhetoric, and similar lying crud, I think it is really that simple.  It is difficult to get a man to understand something when his salary depends on his not understanding it. -- Upton Sinclair, "The Jungle" And it is even more difficult to get someone to understand something when salary and power tripping depends on them not understanding it. 

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Comment #7 posted by Hope on April 12, 2007 at 11:24:30 PT

Had Enough
It is so cool, isn't it? At least I think so. I've been running around and sending emails and trying to give everyone a heads up on this. I like it.
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Comment #6 posted by Had Enough on April 12, 2007 at 11:11:16 PT

Hope
Good tune.I have to add that to my collection.I play stuff like that in the truck during my travels. Whenever I stop, I leave the tunes on so others around get to hear it too.I receive amazing comments at times.Thanks Hope.

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Comment #5 posted by FoM on April 12, 2007 at 10:49:20 PT

MoveOn: Iraq War Poll Results
Kucinich Third in MoveOn Poll, Behind Obama, EdwardsApril 12, 2007Dennis Kucinich's anti-Iraq war platform impressed enough members of the Democratic-leaning political group MoveOn.org this week for the Cleveland congressman to finish third in the organization's presidential straw poll, behind Illinois Sen. Barack Obama and former North Carolina Sen. John Edwards.http://blog.cleveland.com/openers/2007/04/kucinich_third_in_moveon_poll.html
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Comment #4 posted by Hope on April 12, 2007 at 10:48:41 PT

Cept
when actually in the sun and or brush or garden...I have sleeves, too.
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Comment #3 posted by Hope on April 12, 2007 at 10:47:09 PT

Man!
That lead singer has my working on the farm in the hot Texas sun couture down pat. Cept you have to wear long britches on some tasks and I don't see his bandana...a virtual essential (Sweat...dirt... sun...other stuff).We're winnin the war on drugs!
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Comment #2 posted by Hope on April 12, 2007 at 10:37:00 PT

Turn on your speakers.
Play it loud.Video at Grits posting on this page http://gritsforbreakfast.blogspot.com/ under the title of "We're Winning the War on Drugs".Ought to be the anthem at every gathering of prohibitionists and their enforcers.
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Comment #1 posted by Toker00 on April 12, 2007 at 10:33:21 PT

Presidential Straw Poll
http://www.afa.net/petitions/strawpoll/strawpoll.aspPaul. It doesn't count yet anyway.Toke.
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