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Vote for a New Member of MPP's Board of Directors

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Dear friends:

MPP is in the process of choosing a new member of our board of directors.

Want to take part and vote for a candidate?

Qualifying to vote is easy: Anyone who has donated to MPP or the MPP Medical Marijuana Political Action Committee in the last 365 days is eligible to vote. (Donations to MPP Foundation do not count for the purpose of determining eligibility for the MPP board vote.)

If you don't currently qualify to vote, but if you'd like to participate, simply make yourself eligible by making a donation to MPP right now, and then you can cast your vote.

I invite you to participate in the governance of MPP by voting today. Together we will end marijuana prohibition.

Sincerely,

Rob Signature 123109

Rob Kampia
Executive Director
Marijuana Policy Project
Washington, D.C.

 

To contact MPP, please click here or reply to this e-mail. Our mailing address is Marijuana Policy Project, 236 Massachusetts Ave. NE, Suite 400, Washington, D.C. 20002. Any donations you make to MPP may be used for political purposes, such as supporting or opposing candidates for federal office.


 

What if California makes marijuana legal?

California's Proposition 19 on whether to legalize marijuana has fueled a debate among bloggers and pundits over this question: Because Canada exports a large percentage of its marijuana to the United States, could legalization in the U.S. cripple the Canadian economy?

Marijuana legalization may harm Canada's export economy

A thriving marijuana industry has aided Canada's economy, but it is almost completely dependent on U.S. exports. Various agencies and economists agree that marijuana is Canada's largest cash crop ($20 billion per year) and the industry employs 250,000 in British Columbia alone. Now, political shifts in the U.S. and at home are now threatening this boost to Canada's economy.

Will Marijuana Crash the Tea Party? (Opinion)

With marijuana policy very much a states' rights issue and the Obama administration enacting a policy of deference to state policies on medical marijuana, NORML's "Radical" Russ Belville opines on whether the Tea Party's constituency is made up of ideological allies of marijuana law reform.

Marijuana Initiative: "Just Say Now"

Backers of a new initiative to end the federal prohibition on marijuana made the case that a "silenced majority" of Americans are "beginning to rise up" to express their support for ending what they say has been a failed war on marijuana. The organizations -- Law Enforcement Against Prohibition, Students for Sensible Drug Policy, and FireDogLake -- are circulating a petition online and on college campuses asking President Obama to end the federal ban on using the drug.

Why Marijuana Decriminalization Should Be a Christian Issue (Opinion)

U.S. drug policy condemns millions of our neighbors to be warehoused in prisons for nonviolent offenses. Today, 1 in 100 American adults is living behind bars. James Clark, a community organizer and Candler School of Theology graduate, reflects on the systemic denial of Christian love and compassion toward those struggling with addiction.

Forum: Where Is Marijuana Reform Heading?

The ACLU-WA presents a discussion on the history, current status, and future of marijuana-law reform in Washington and the United States. Local and national panelists include travel writer Rick Steves; Keith Stroup, founder of, and legal counsel to, the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws; Washington state Sen. Jeanne Kohl-Welles; Rob Kampia, co-founder and executive director of the Marijuana Policy Project; and Ethan Nadelmann, founder and executive director of the Drug Policy Alliance. Moderated by ACLU-WA Drug Policy Director Alison Holcomb.

Free and open to the public. This is not a ticketed event. Admission is on a first-come, first-served basis.

Panelist Bios

Rob Kampia is co-founder and executive director of the Marijuana Policy Project, the largest organization in the U.S. that's focused exclusively on ending marijuana prohibition; MPP and Kampia are based in Washington, D.C. Kampia has testified before Congress, the Washington state legislature, and nearly a dozen other state legislatures. Kampia has debated on national TV dozens of times, including on NBC's "Today Show," the Fox News Channel's "O'Reilly Factor," CNN's "Anderson Cooper 360," the Fox Business Network, CNBC, and MSNBC. MPP was partially or exclusively responsible for enacting the medical marijuana laws in the District of Columbia, Hawaii, Maine, Michigan, Montana, Rhode Island, and Vermont; the marijuana decriminalization law in Massachusetts; local marijuana initiatives that have passed in Seattle and dozens of other cities; and the U.S. Justice Department's policy to de-prioritize the enforcement of federal marijuana laws in (the now 14) states where medical marijuana is legal.

Jeanne Kohl-Welles has represented the 36th Legislative District in the Washington State Senate since 1994 after serving for three years in the House of Representatives where she was Majority Whip. In addition to her chairmanship of the Sen. Labor, Commerce & Consumer Protection Committee, Sen. Kohl-Welles sits on the Senate Ways & Means and Judiciary Committees. She has a Ph.D. in Sociology of Education from UCLA and was a Fannie Mae Foundation Fellow at Harvard University’s Kennedy School of Government’s Senior Executives in State and Local Government Program. Sen. Kohl-Welles was prime sponsor of SB 6032 (passed in 2007), which clarified Washington’s medical marijuana law and required the state Department of Health to study patient access issues, and SB 5798 (passed in 2010), which expanded the list of healthcare professionals who can authorize the medical use of cannabis to include physician assistants, osteopathic physicians’ assistants, advanced registered nurse practitioners, and naturopathic doctors.

Ethan Nadelmann is the founder and executive director of the Drug Policy Alliance, a leading organization in the United States promoting alternatives to the war on drugs grounded in science, compassion, health and human rights. Nadelmann was born in New York City and received his B.A., J.D., and Ph.D. from Harvard, and a master’s degree in international relations from the London School of Economics. He then taught politics and public affairs at Princeton University from 1987 to 1994, where his speaking and writings on drug policy—in publications ranging from Science and Foreign Affairs to American Heritage and National Review—attracted international attention. He authored Cops Across Borders, the first scholarly study of the internationalization of U.S. criminal law enforcement, and co-authored another book entitled Policing the Globe: Criminalization and Crime Control in International Relations, published by Oxford University Press in 2006.

Rick Steves grew up in Edmonds, Washington and studied at the University of Washington where he received degrees in Business Administration and European History. But his real education came in Europe — since 1973 he's spent 120 days a year in Europe. Spending one third of his adult life living out of a suitcase in Europe has shaped his thinking. Today he employs 80 people at his Europe Through the Back Door headquarters where he produces over 50 guidebooks on European travel, the most popular travel series in America on public television, a weekly hour-long national public radio show, and a weekly column syndicated by the Chicago Tribune. Rick Steves lives and works in his hometown of Edmonds, Washington. His office window overlooks his old junior high school.

Keith Stroup is a Washington, D.C. public-interest attorney who founded NORML in 1970. Stroup obtained his undergraduate degree in political science from the University of Illinois in 1965, and in 1968 he graduated from Georgetown Law School. Following two years as staff counsel for the National Commission on Product Safety, Stroup founded NORML and ran the organization through 1979, during which time 11 states decriminalized minor marijuana offenses. Stroup has also practiced criminal law, lobbied on Capitol Hill for family farmers and artists, and served as executive director of the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers (NACDL). In 1994 Stroup resumed his work with NORML, serving again as Executive Director through 2004. He currently serves as Legal Counsel with NORML. In 1992 Stroup was the recipient of the Richard J. Dennis Drugpeace Award for Outstanding Achievement in the Field of Drug Policy Reform presented by the Drug Policy Foundation, Washington, D.C.

Hempstalk 2010

The Hemp and Cannabis Foundation present Hempstalk 2010.  Please join us in beautiful Kelley Point Park.

For more information, please see http://www.hempstalk.org/ or call 503-235-4606.

Could Pot Drive Turnout In Key Elections?

A survey making the rounds among strategists, which has yet to be made public, indicates that pot could be just the enticement many reluctant voters need to get to the polls. Support for marijuana legalization has been ticking up over the past decade as residents of states with legal medical marijuana realize that the sky hasn't fallen. And backing has surged more recently amid deficit hysteria and a declining economy, as voters are less inclined to spend tax dollars on a drug war when instead marijuana could itself be taxed and used to create jobs.