“If you’re sitting around wondering when they are going to legalize pot, you’re part of the problem. YOU have to legalize pot. You and your like-minded pot smokers, cannabis consumers, medical marijuana patients, and lovers of liberty, peaceably assembled to exercise your free speech and to petition your government for a redress of grievances”
A Call to Arms
Thought for the day
Massachusetts!
The governor and the representatives of the people of Massachusetts, acknowledging that previous efforts have not succeeded in eliminating or curtailing marijuana use and abuse; determined to exercise some measure of control over the use of cannabis consistent with respect for individual freedom and responsibility; and declaring our objectives to be the reduction of cannabis abuse, the elimination of marijuana-related crime and the raising of public revenue, do hereby ordain and enact The Cannabis Regulation and Taxation Act.
WA to repeal cannabis laws
Pop Quiz Hotshot
a) Marijuana use significantly increased the likelihood of developing lung cancer.
b) Marijuana smoking was not associated with an increased risk of lung cancer.
c) Marijuana smokers and cigarette smokers were equally likely to develop lung cancer. d) Marijuana-only smokers were more likely than cigarette-only smokers to develop lung cancer. The answer, perhaps to your surprise, is b.Not only was marijuana smoking not associated with an increased risk of lung cancer, but it was not found to be associated with lung-related cancers at all, even among subjects who had smoked up to 22,000 joints in their lifetimes. The study’s lead researcher, Dr. Donald Tashkin at the University of California at Los Angeles, offered, "We hypothesized that there would be a positive association between marijuana use and lung cancer … What we found instead was no association at all, and even a suggestion of some protective effect." What the latter part of that quote means is that people who smoked marijuana actually had *lower* incidences of cancer compared to non-users of the drug.
Free Market FTW
The shifting economics of the marijuana trade have broad implications for Mexico's war against the drug cartels, suggesting that market forces, as much as law enforcement, can extract a heavy price from criminal organizations that have used the spectacular profits generated by pot sales to fuel the violence and corruption that plague the Mexican state.
Economics 101.
Debunking the most common anti-cannabis arguments
Although the historical assaults on cannabis no longer carry much weight, the prohibition movement has settled upon a few key points that will likely be the most often repeated anti-pot points you'll hear over the next couple of years. Those key points are:
- Marijuana is much stronger than it used to be.
- Marijuana causes mental illness, in particular schizophrenia.
- The economic costs of legalizing marijuana would outweigh the benefits.
All these points are demonstrably false. However, merely demonstrating that they are false isn't enough. On These Ramparts will attempt to demonstrate four things about each of these points:
- Where does this argument come from?
- Why is it false?
- Why does it resonate with people? (in other words, why is it being used?)
- How can this argument be effectively neutralized?
An Open Letter to the NCPIC
Your website provides a great deal of information about the peripheral issues surrounding cannabis legalization, but as such provides no succinct statement about why cannabis should not be legalized. Is it a moral issue for the NCPIC? Economic? Or do you simply assume that the negative effects of legalization are so perfectly self-evident that no justification for keeping cannabis illegal is required?
Furthermore, is the NCPIC forbidden to even explore the possibility of legalization, or does it remain neutral in this regard?
If this answers are already on the NCPIC website, and I have overlooked them, I apologize for wasting your time.
Regards,
JS Mill
On These Ramparts.
No response as of yet.
Fortune Magazine
Initially only Nevada permitted gambling, and then it was just Nevada and New Jersey. "But over a period of time," Stroup says, "the morality part of the issue kind of dissipated, and there were more and more needs for new revenue, and today almost every state in the country allows legalized gambling."
Link
ABOUT
In spite of these numbers, very few active pro-cannabis organizations exist in Australia. Those that do exist are often inextricably linked to the public perception of marijuana as a subset of a specific, drug-centered lifestyle that fetishizes marijuana and its associated historical tropes. Whilst we recognize and fully support the right of people to be a part of this culture, we feel that this perception greatly reduces the chance of cannabis legalization ever being taken seriously. This is certainly unfair, but it is also a statement of fact. The debate about cannabis legalization cannot be won with facts and good intentions alone. The medium is the message.
Cannabis advocacy in the USA is a case in point. There are many prominent cannabis legalization associations that have been instrumental in the promotion and passing of medical marijuana laws in thirteen states. Recent polls have suggested that over half the population of California favours the legalization, taxation and regulation of marijuana. Spokespeople from these advocacy groups regularly appear on television, calmly and rationally making their case, further severing the link between cannabis and its outdated stereotypes.
On These Ramparts is an attempt to replicate this style of cannabis advocacy in Australia. It is an attempt to bring people out of what the prominent conservative commentator Andrew Sullivan has called the “cannabis closet”, in the belief that if enough people are willing to storm the ramparts of received opinion, it may actually be possible for cannabis legalization to be implemented.
Such talk might have seemed fanciful only a few years ago, but 2009 has been a stellar year for cannabis advocacy in the US. The Republican governor of California, Arnold Schwarzenegger, has openly called for a debate about marijuana legalization. The last three US presidents have all admitted to using marijuana. Cannabis legalization receives bipartisan support from both conservative and liberal intellectuals and economists. There is no reason why such success can’t be replicated in Australia.
At On These Ramparts, we believe that enough is enough. We’re sick and tired of marijuana consumers being stereotyped as idiots, hippies, degenerates and worse. Sick and tired of the creeping nanny state insisting upon what is and isn’t good for you. Sick and tired of neo-prohibitionists continuously shifting the goalposts with regards to the criminalization of marijuana. Sick and tired of the misreadings and outright junk science promoted by a hysterical media. It’s time to storm the ramparts.
PRESS
Marie Claire, September 2009
"I hate the term pothead—it connotes that I'm high 24/7, which I'm not," Pelham says, wincing. "I don't need it to get through my day. I just enjoy it when my day is over." Her nightly ritual costs only $50 a month, a pittance compared with the cost of her monthly gym membership or a Saturday night out with her fiancĂ©, an investment banker, who occasionally smokes with her.
Marijuana's New High Life - Adam Tschorn
Los Angeles Times, August 30th 2009
Public sentiment is more than anecdotal; earlier this year, a California Field Poll found that 56% of California voters supported legalizing and taxing marijuana. Last month, voters in Oakland overwhelmingly approved a tax increase on medical marijuana sales, the first of its kind in the country, and Los Angeles Councilwoman Janice Hahn has proposed something similar for the City of Angels. "In this current economic crisis, we need to get creative about how we raise funds," Hahn said in a statement.
ESSAYS
Mother Jones, July/August 2009
So, to recap: Decriminalization of simple possession appears to have little effect on cannabis consumption. Full legalization would likely increase use only moderately as long as heavy commercialization is prohibited, although the effect on chronic users might be more substantial. It would increase heroin and cocaine use only slightly if at all, and it might decrease alcohol consumption by a small amount.