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LEAP: We Can Do It Again!
European Coalition for Just and Effective Drug Policies: December Newsletter
Semanal: Esta semana en la historia
Europa: En cumbre del cannabis, alcaldes holandeses intentan tratar del âproblema de la puerta traseraâ del abastecimiento de los cafés y del estatus general de la marihuana
Marihuana medicinal: Corte Suprema de California restringe concepto de âcuidadorâ, fallo va a empujar a pacientes hacia cooperativas y dispensarios
Indultos: Presidente Bush conmuta condenas de dos por cocaÃna y concede 12 perdones
Reseña de la Crónica: "Cop in the Hood: My Year Policing Baltimore's Eastern District", de Peter Moskos (2008, Princeton University Press, 245 págs., US$ 24.95, edición en tapas duras)
Reportaje: La 10ª Conferencia Internacional de SSDP
Tainted Cocaine is a Consequence of Drug Prohibition
But here we have the drug czar highlighting reports of tainted cocaine in Canada and proposing drug treatment as the solution to that. Isnât it ironic that, after tirelessly advocating policies which drive drug distribution underground, the drug czar then cites a poisoned drug supply as an argument for abstinence?
Random Drug Testing Wonât Save the Children From Heroin
Heroin killed 19-year-old Alicia Lannes, and her parents say she got the drug from a boyfriend. Experts say that's how most young kids get introduced to drugs: by friends or relatives.
â¦
While teen drug use is declining, Walters says a Fairfax County heroin ring busted in connection with Lannes' death proves it's still a problem. He supports a federal program used in more than 4,000 schools to randomly drug test students.
"There's no question in my mind had this young woman been in a school, middle school or high school with random testing," said Walters, "She would not be dead today." [FOX DC]
Walters sounds supremely confident, as usual, yet the reality is that random drug testing is often impotent when it comes to discovering heroin use. Student drug testing programs typically rely on urine tests, which can only detect heroin for 3-4 days after use. Only marijuana -- which stays in your system for up to a month â can be effectively detected this way. Thus, random testing actually incentivizes students to experiment with more dangerous drugs like heroin that increase your chances of passing a drug test.
And thanks to the complete failure of the drug war, heroin is stronger today than ever before:
The drug enforcement agency says the purity of heroin found in Virginia is typically higher than usualâmaking it more deadly.
"They tend not to know how to gauge the strength and they usually take more than they need to," said Patrick McConnel, who oversees Treatment for Youth Services Administration Alcohol and Drug Services.
There are no easy answers here, to be sure, and I donât claim any monopoly on the solutions to youth drug abuse. But I guarantee you that the problem isnât our failure to collect more urine from young people. As long as the most dangerous substances continue to be manufactured, distributed, and controlled by criminals, the face of our drug problem will remain the same.
State Medical Cannabis Laws are Final! Return of Legal Cannabis Not Pre-empted by Federal Law
The U.S. Supreme Court refused to review a landmark decision yesterday in which California state courts found that its medical cannabis law is not preempted by federal law. The Supreme Courtâs decision in Garden Grove v. Superior Court means that federal law does not prevent state and local governments from implementing medical cannabis laws adopted by voters or state legislatures. In short: federal law does not override state law on medical cannabis!
Yesterdayâs decision follows three years of strategic legal work by Americans for Safe Access (ASA) in a California case involving the return of wrongfully confiscated medicine. ASA needs your help to keep doing important work like this. Please take a moment to make a special contribution to ASA today.
The Courtâs decision has broad implications for medical cannabis patients in the 13 states where medical cannabis is legal, and signals a sea change in the impasse between state and federal laws. Better adherence to state medical cannabis laws by local police will result in fewer needless arrests and other problems for patients, allowing for better implementation of medical cannabis laws in all states that have adopted them.
Medical cannabis advocates should be encouraged by opportunities for change in federal policy with a new Presidential Administration and shift in Congress. But until now, federal pre-emption has haunted patients whose state laws allow for medical cannabis use. This decision further clears the way for state implementation and adds new urgency to ASAâs work in the nationâs capitol, where we have been working full-time to change federal policy since 2006.
ASA is working in the courts and in the halls of Congress to protect and expand patientsâ rights â and we are making a difference. We have won important victories in court, made significant inroads in Congress, and helped reframe the national debate about medical cannabis. But we need your help to carry on. Please make a contribution to support ASA today.
Thank you,
Steph Sherer
Executive Director
Americans for Safe Access
P.S. Read more about the Supreme Court decision at www.AmericansForSafeAccess.org/USSCKha.
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