Archive for the ‘Prohibition’ category

Live Blog: DEA Raids of Medical Marijuana in Montana

March 14th, 2011

In this liveblogging post, Montana NORML is sharing rumors and reports as they come in, and confirming them as time allows.

As the rate of information flow was slowed considerably, we’ll stop updating this liveblog post as of Wednesday night, March 16th, 2011. For the latest Montana marijuana news, please follow us on Facebook, Twitter, or email.

6:00PM – Growing number of medical marijuana dispensaries, no regulation laws: http://www.kpax.com/news/growing-number-of-medical-marijuana-dispensaries-no-regulation-laws/

5:45PM – Rumor: 40 federal agents checked into the Hampton Inn in Missoula yesterday morning.

4:30PM – Statewide protests begin in 30 minutes.  http://blog.montananorml.org/2011/03/15/montana-medical-marijuana-federal-raid-protests/

11:18AM – CNN picks up the story: http://www.cnn.com/2011/CRIME/03/16/montana.marijuana.raids/

5:20AM – “thousands of marijuana plants, computers, cell phones, patient lists and other related items were whisked away by federal agents in an unprecedented statewide crackdown” http://www.greatfallstribune.com/article/20110316/NEWS01/103160304/1002/news01/State-s-U-S-attorney-defends-medical-marijuana-raids

5:11AM – Analysis: The Bureaucracies that marijuana feeds: http://www.newswithviews.com/Timothy/baldwin159.htm

5:00AM – “If the federal government is changing their stance, I think it would be fair to let everybody know and give people a chance to bow out.”  – http://www.bozemandailychronicle.com/news/article_df545e30-4f66-11e0-ade4-001cc4c03286.html

Wednesday, 4:54AM “It felt like a serious armed robbery to me.” – http://helenair.com/news/article_cf075fb2-4f95-11e0-8899-001cc4c03286.html

6:06PM – Some grisly details of the federal investigation, millions in cash allegedly deposited: http://billingsgazette.com/news/local/article_01f9d21f-b862-5ae5-bd48-7b17723d869d.html

5:57PM – National Cannabis Industry Association weighs in: http://coloradoindependent.com/79239/feds-raid-montana-medical-marijuana-operations

5:55PM – Medical cannabis shop re-opens one day after raid: http://www.kxlf.com/news/raided-marijuana-facility-back-open-with-limited-inventory/

5:31PM – Demand Progress launches an action alert on the Montana raids: http://act.demandprogress.org/act/medicalmarijuana/

5:20PM – An analysis of why the federal government decided to conduct the medical marijuana raids in Montana: http://forfeiturereform.com/2011/03/15/montana-raids-drug-war/

5:07PM – Federal agents have seized $4 million in Montanans’ assets: http://www.belgrade-news.com/news/article_56705f02-4f47-11e0-b342-001cc4c03286.html

4:20PM – Justice Department released their press statement: MJ Press Release FINAL

2:22PM – Statewide raid protests announced: http://blog.montananorml.org/2011/03/15/montana-medical-marijuana-federal-raid-protests/

12:16PM – Video: Former U.S. Attorney discusses Montana raids – http://www.ktvq.com/videoplayer/?video_id=5640

12:12PM – Bozeman newspaper reporter was asked to stop photographing federal agents at the scene of a raid yesterday: http://twitter.com/#!/bozchron/status/47391170241888257

11:53AM – NBC affiliate wants to hear from patients affected by the raids: http://twitter.com/#!/BeartoothNBC/status/47715155026526208

9:05AM – RUMOR: More federal warrants to be served today.

8:54AM – Owner of MCM predicted that federal officials seized between $50,000 and $100,000 worth of marijuana plants and equipment Monday. http://www.kbzk.com/news/marijuana-plants-equipment-being-hauled-away-from-belgrade-shop/

8:07AM – Belgrade raid: “They put my dispenser up against the wall and put her in handcuffs — scared the crap out of her.”:  http://www.belgrade-news.com/mobile/article_1cb7f4a0-4eb1-11e0-aa4e-001cc4c03286.html

7:25AM – Pics posted from Helena greenhouse raided and cleaned out by federal agents: http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=47846&id=100000629497405&fbid=196742730356709

2:49AM – Office of the United States Attorney General Public Comment Line – 202-353-1555

2:48AM – “Federal level police actions being timed to correspond with relevant state legislative votes. What’s the message behind that?” http://cannabisandculture.com/post/3872207477/montana-medical-marijuana-repeal-and-the-federal-raids

Tuesday, 2:12AM – “Then at a very critical moment, suddenly the big brother heel of federal government comes down on growers and providers. … It certainly feels like a calculated attempt to influence Montana decision-making.” – Tom Daubert http://missoulian.com/news/local/article_eae07e58-4e7d-11e0-aa23-001cc4c03286.html

11:59PM – ASA Director Steph Sherer weighs in on Montana’s federal raids. http://www.ktvq.com/news/billings-medical-marijuana-community-in-shock-over-statewide-raids/

10:52PM – What you can do about the federal raids in Montana: http://mailman.modwest.com/pipermail/mtnorml-list/2011-March/000220.html

10:04PM – NBC Montana publishes a search warrant for Bigsky Patient Care (large PDF): http://www.nbcmontana.com/download/2011/0315/27195983.pdf

9:48PM – Homeland Security took the lead in Flathead raids. http://www.dailyinterlake.com/news/local_montana/article_893eb730-4eb1-11e0-b931-001cc4c002e0.html

9:42PM – At least one raided caregiver had his home raided as well. Caregivers should assume/prepare for that.

8:29PM – Federal warrant sought “marijuana and hashish, drug paraphernalia, computers and other electronic storage devices, cell phones, firearms, transportation and customer records, transaction records, cash, jewelry and vehicle titles.” http://www.therepublic.com/view/story/a9ef98ed05cf44f9be84d4ec28d2da30/MT–Medical-Marijuana-Raids/

8:18PM – We’re told that Natural Medicine of Great Falls was also raided today.

6:06PM – Americans for Forfeiture Reform is covering the story and sharing valuable info on asset forfeiture: http://forfeiturereform.com/2011/03/14/breaking-dea-raids-in-montana/

5:58PM – We’re told that in some raids, federal agents took everything, including lights and ballasts and other equipment.

5:56PM – We’re told that DEA and FBI agents are still hanging around the Good Medicine dispensary in Columbia Falls, and have blocked anyone from pulling into the parking lot. Northern Lights, 4 Seasons, and CEG reportedly shut down.

5:51PM – The U.S. Attorney overseeing the raids is the Financial Litigation Unit Chief. http://www.mbcc.mt.gov/resources/directory/federal/dir-d-usattorneys.asp

5:47PM -  We hear that Outlaw Hill Health in Livingston was also a victim of the raids.

5:08PM – $456,000 worth of marijuana confiscated from one location.  http://www.cnbc.com/id/42078047

5:00PM – We received a phone call from criminal defense attorney Craig Shannon who offered this advice for everyone: You are not obligated to answer any questions. You are not obligated to let anyone in without a warrant. You are not obligated to consent to any search. Even innocent questions like “Are you a caregiver?” or “Are you a patient?” are parts of an investigatory strategy and can and will be used against you in court.  Once given, you cannot take back your answers. It might feel uncooperative to assert these rights, but it’s actually patriotic. Call your local lawyer to discuss.

4:37PM – We’ve been contacted by Americans for Forfeiture Reform. Victims of these raids should all contact them as well.

4:20PM – Across Montana, terror and rage evolves into disciplined and focused resolve.

3:47PM – Big Sky Patient Care and MCM in Bozeman raided, DEA news release to become available soon: http://www.kxlf.com/news/update-law-enforcement-converge-on-montana-medical-marijuana-businesses/

3:16PM – “They’re seizing everything – plants, marijuana, grow equipment, files and computers.” – http://missoulian.com/news/local/article_eae07e58-4e7d-11e0-aa23-001cc4c03286.html

3:08PM – If you have been raided or arrested, FAX a copy of the warrant to ASA at: 510-251-2036

2:46PM – GF Tribune reports 8 people in handcuffs at Montana Cannabis in Helena. http://www.greatfallstribune.com/article/20110314/NEWS01/110314019/Four-Montana-medical-marijuana-business-raided

2:40PM – Received a photo from the MT Cannabis raid in Missoula.

2:30PM – Received a report that Four Seasons Gardening and Northern Light Medical (Kalispell) have been raided by federal officials and served warrants for money laundering.

2:20PM – Received a report that Yellowstone Patient Care in Billings is being raided. And Montana Cannabis’ store in Missoula.

2:08PM – Good Medicine Providers in Columbia Falls raided. http://helenair.com/news/article_6f5888e6-4e75-11e0-b983-001cc4c002e0.html

1:57PM – ASA is collecting reports from anyone who has been raided: 510.251.1856 or toll-free 888.929.4367

1:49PM – Just got a call about a raid in the Bitterroot somewhere. Trying to get confirmation.

1:45PM – So far we are hearing rumors of the following being raided by DEA, ATF, and local law enforcement officials:

We will update this page as more info becomes available.

Montana NORML Newsletter – Good News on HB 33 and Other Local News

January 25th, 2011

Friends,

Earlier this morning in the House Judiciary Committee, HB 33, the any-amount-of-cannabis-metabolites-is-DUI bill, was tabled. This means it’s likely dead. Republicans and Democrats alike saw it as an overreaching of authority and science to charge people with DUI just because of some traces of chemicals in their urine.

Relish that news, as there may not be a lot more good news out of this legislative session. We’ll see.

Also, there’s a hearing tomorrow about SB 193:
http://data.opi.mt.gov/bills/2011/billhtml/SB0193.htm

This bill is interesting is that it attempts to “tighten up” the medical marijuana program with subtle tweaks, rather than dramatic re-invention.

Some if these tweaks include:

  • raises patient app fee to $150
  • requires  patients and caregivers to sign statement not to divert
  • two physicians required for minors
  • caregiver registration fee of $200
  • caregivers must be residents and submit fingerprints
  • caregivers may not have criminal records that include crimes of violence or felony drugs (unless more than 10 years ago)
  • automatic card revocation for diversion
  • increase to 2.5 oz possession limit
  • plants must be grown in enclosed locked facility
  • 2.5 oz every 14 days max sold per patient
  • caregiver must maintain records of those sales, available to cops on request
  • no public smoking allowed

Have an opinion on these matters? Here’s next steps for action:

In other news, the state bill to prohibit cities and counties from passing law designed to establish law enforcement priorities was proposed by Missoula County Attorney Fred Van Valkenburg in response to Missoula County’s Initiative #2, which recommended that law enforcement treat adult marijuana crimes as their lowest possible priority:  http://missoulian.com/news/local/article_4a730082-2847-11e0-8f9c-001cc4c002e0.html?mode=story

Curiouser and curiouser.

Montana NORML Newsletter – Missoula Jury in National News, Stop Prohibition and Help the Cause

December 24th, 2010

Friends,

On my bus ride home in Missoula tonight, three local government employees were talking about the medical marijuana controversy.  They were saying that all these young people with supposed chronic pain and hemorrhoids were abusing the law, but cancer patients should have access.

I listened for a while, and as they wrapped up the conversation, one said cheerfully, “Hey, I think it’s just about cocktail-thirty,” which earned appreciative guffaws from several 40-somethings nearby. I smiled too.

As we approached my neighborhood though, I turned to the group and asked, “Wait, we say it’s cocktail-thirty with a grin, but a guy’s gotta have cancer in order to have legal access to marijuana??”

The hypocrisy of prohibition re-illuminated in my mind, this casual exchange cemented my resolve to publish this: Medical Marijuana is a Flawed Policy

Marijuana prohibition continues to crumble. A Missoula jury pool made national news this week, by telling the judge they had no interest in convicting anyone for personal amounts of marijuana. The story was covered by the Wall Street JournalChange.org, the New York Times, the American Bar Association,  USA TodayFIJADeath & TaxesToke of the Town, and many more.

This is huge. But it should not be any particular surprise for Missoula, Montana. This is the city and county that passed, via citizens’ initiative in 2006, a recommendation that adult marijuana crimes be the lowest possible priority for law enforcement. And, while pot possession is not exactly a high priority for them, still, someone gets busted for marijuana in this community almost every day. Here’s the latest reports, and the grievance form in case you get busted (PDF).

Ending marijuana prohibition will probably not happen in Montana in 2011 (though we’ll be trying! Click the yellow button here to donate to the cause).

The best we can likely hope for is some sort of medical marijuana regulation. Whatever emerges from the spring legislature will piss a lot of people off, I guarantee it. Here’s a short list of marijuana proposals — so far!

So, while a serious rewrite of our medical marijuana law sounds scary, we do have influence over the details. If we work together.

Here’s how you can help:

  • Patients with debilitating conditions: email info@mtcrcp.org if you’d like to tell your story to legislators in Helena this winter.
  • Growers: do you have email addresses and phone calls of all your patients yet? You can expect email from us about time-sensitive advocacy actions over the next few months. Get ready!
  • Growers: Start raising money from your patients – and your profits. Write a check if you love what you do. Today.
  • Everyone: Find your district at http://montanadrugpolicy.org and register to receive legislative alerts!
  • Everyone: To help raise funds to fund education and lobbying efforts during the upcoming legislature, send your check to:

Citizens for Responsible Crime Policy
PO Box 7146
Missoula MT 59807

For the weekly news roundup, check out the Montana NORML Facebook page.

And, please forward this message to your friends. Spread the word.

Don’t do nothing.

Kindly.

Medical Marijuana is a Flawed Policy

December 23rd, 2010

Medical marijuana as a therapeutic application has been demonstrably effective. Medical marijuana as public policy has been demonstrably problematic.

It is doomed to be tethered to controversy and crime as long as cannabis, itself, is.

1/2oz of gloryThe solution is to regulate marijuana for all adults, and allow them to use it responsibly — for therapeutic, social, or spiritual reasons of their personal choosing.

Three important clarifications:

  • The solution is not to repeal medical marijuana; that would simply turn control of the industry completely into criminals’ hands.
  • Marijuana is safe, effective medicine for a wide array of conditions.
  • Medical marijuana has been good practice. It has successfully demonstrated that legal marijuana farms and stores can operate responsibly in a community with no ill effects.

It’s the medical aspect of the policy that is doomed. Show me a medical marijuana law that is working perfectly — or even, to the general satisfaction of the public. Each state’s law seems to be either widely ridiculed for the ease with which “patients” get their “green cards” so they can buy their “BubbleBerry SkunkBud” from “Dr. Feelgood”, or loudly criticized by impassioned advocates for denying compassionate access to the sick and dying.

Medical marijuana laws help people, yes,  but the policy is unavoidably haunted by the spectre of the black market. “Diversion”, as law enforcement officials call it, of “medical marijuana” to people not authorized to possess it (non-patients) is a constant concern.

Medical marijuana creates a false divide between people who are too healthy (and honest) for medical marijuana, and people sick (or unscrupulous) enough to have legal access.

Because there is no objective definition of “medical use”, medical marijuana laws are unavoidably controversial. Some say that “if a doctor recommends it, it’s medical”, yet it’s clear to all observers that there have been some opportunistic doctors that have rushed in to sign recommendations for nearly anyone, making a mockery of both law and medicine.

The flood of new “patients”, many or most of whom are judged in the court of public opinion as “abusing” the law are making, admittedly, a rational choice. Marijuana has a place in their lives, and they’d like not to be arrested for that choice. In that sense, they’re not abusing the law, they’re eager to comply with the law. They’d like to “be legal”.

The solution to all these difficulties is to eliminate the “medical”.

Allow all adults to buy marijuana from licensed, regulated store fronts,  supplied by licensed, regulated producers.

Eliminating medical cannabis laws in favor of integrating cannabis into a legal marketplace for all adults doesn’t eliminate medical use. In fact, it creates a safer product and more functional marketplace, for medical users and others, because the design of the industry can be driven by standards and overseen by knowledgeable regulators rather than driven by the needs of law enforcement and overseen by people with guns.

There is simply nothing wrong with responsible adult use of marijuana, and it should be of no concern to the government whether one uses marijuana medically, spiritually, or socially.

Why Conservatives Should Support Ending Marijuana Prohibition

December 9th, 2010

While ending marijuana prohibition is a policy often associated with liberals, true conservatives should support it too. Consider:

Conservatives support fiscal responsibility and small government. Marijuana prohibition is a massive, expensive government program, requiring millions of dollars in law enforcement against mostly individual users, not kingpins.  The Montana Board of Crime Control reported over 5000 “drug crimes” in 2009, mostly simple possession offenses, and 67% were for marijuana.  Nationwide, someone is arrested or cited for marijuana possession every 37 seconds.

Ron Paul:  “The drug war encourages violence. Government violence against nonviolent users is notorious and has led to the unnecessary prison overpopulation. Innocent taxpayers are forced to pay for all this so-called justice.”

Conservatives support free enterprise and small business. Montana’s controversial medical marijuana law has nonetheless created dozens or perhaps hundreds of thriving small businesses around the state. Some may have previously worked in the black market, but now they’re productive citizens, hiring the unemployed, and paying their fair share. The ones who work the hardest to provide a quality product at a good price could become rich — that’s the American dream, after all, and conservatives should encourage these entrepreneurs, not rebuke them.

Glenn Beck: “You know what, I think it’s about time we legalize marijuana….We have to make a choice in this country. We have to either put people who are smoking marijuana behind bars, or we legalize it. But this little game we’re playing in the middle is not helping us, is not helping Mexico, and is causing massive violence on our southern border.”

Conservatives support freedom from the “nanny state”. All will agree that the state has some role to play in preventing one citizen from harming another.  But most conservatives believe that the state has no right or duty to interfere in what adults put in their own bodies.  Why should the power of government be brought to bear on what plants you choose to grow on your property, in the absence of any demonstrable harm to your neighbors?

William F. Buckley Jr.: “Even if one takes every reefer madness allegation of the prohibitionists at face value, marijuana prohibition has done far more harm to far more people than marijuana ever could.”

Conservatives support the efforts of law enforcement officers to keep our streets and families safe. And yet fighting the drug war makes a mockery of law enforcement, accounting for millions of dollars in expense while marijuana use continues — as it has for thousands of years.  Let’s free up our law enforcement professionals to focus entirely on real crimes, like gang violence, sex crimes, and professional thievery. Many cops agree.

Sarah Palin: “I think we need to prioritize our law-enforcement efforts. And if somebody’s gonna smoke a joint in their house and not do anybody else harm, then perhaps there are other things our cops should be looking at to engage in and try to clean up some of the other problems that we have in society.”

Conservatives want to keep kids off drugs. Everyone else does too.  A cruel irony of our current policy of prohibition is that it makes marijuana more available to youngsters. That’s right, teenagers regularly rate beer harder to buy than pot. Why? Because drug dealers don’t check ID. By bringing marijuana out of the black market and into a legal marketplace, we could establish common sense controls like age requirements, and make it harder for kids to get it.

Milton Friedman: “There are some general features of a socialist enterprise, whether it’s the post office, schools or the war on drugs. The enterprise is inefficient, expensive, very advantageous to a small group of people and harmful to a lot of people.”

Conservatives support state sovereignty. The Tenth Amendment explicitly states the Constitution’s principle of federalism by providing that powers not granted to the federal government nor prohibited to the states by the Constitution of the United States are reserved to the states or the people. While the federal government has asserted its power to prohibit marijuana, one is left wondering where exactly in the Constitution it finds that power. Ending marijuana prohibition is a states’ rights issue.

The time has come for courageous conservatives to be consistent to their principles and support an end to marijuana prohibition. If you support limited government, individual liberty, and safer streets, it just makes sense.

P.S., if you outlaw marijuana, only outlaws will have marijuana. Sound familiar?

Montana NORML Newsletter – Repeal or Legalization? Politics and the News

November 19th, 2010

Friends,

All my politically-connected friends keep telling me that our most recent election is a catastrophe for medical marijuana. The Republicans, who have a majority in both legislative houses in Montana, seriously considered opening the debate with a proposal (sure to win) to either 1) erase medical marijuana from the books, or 2) send it back to the media en-flamed hysterical voters. There is no guarantee that the voters would support the same law, today.

That said, my politically-savvy friends also say that outright appeal is possible, yes, but unlikely.

Of course, our message and goal is that Marijuana Legalization is the Best Thing For Patients. Really, the current controversy in Montana is not about the “marijuana” part of medical marijuana — the problem is the “medical” part, right?

There is no doubt that marijuana will cause vigorous debates in Helena (check out the proposed bills so far) when the legislature convenes in ~45 days. Whether you think that cannabis is a precious medicine for the sick and dying, or a sacred herb that should be available to all, or all of the above, I hope you’ll take a moment and register your location at http://mjdb.montanadrugpolicy.org — this is the primary way we’ll be reaching out to concerned citizens about the upcoming legislative mayhem. Click, register, make a difference, easy.

One of the challenges for medical marijuana preservation is that there are still lots of honest health care professionals who just haven’t been presented with the information that is available on cannabis’ medical benefits.  How can you help?

Buy a copy of the 86-page booklet, Emerging Clinical Applications for Cannabis and Cannabinoids: A Review of the Scientific Literature 2000-2010, and tell us which health-care professional you’d like us to send it to.  Or, join a recent anonymous donor in donating $100 to fund the sending of booklets out statewide.

Click the yellow donate button on our website to help out.

Finally, a bit of gossip. We got a tip this morning that the offices of Jason Christ’s Montana Caregivers Network in Missoula were being raided. I walked over to the MCN office personally, and saw Missoula Police and Missoula County Deputies, and Jason in the middle, smiling and talking.

I anticipate there will be some dramatic media coverage soon, and that’s all I know so far.

Speaking of sensationalistic coverage, here’s the news:

Various Marijuana News

A moment of silence now, for the Montana outdoor plants that didn’t make it through the cold this week, and the Montana grown-ups who got busted this week.

Good night.

Marijuana Legalization is the Best Thing For Patients

November 18th, 2010

Medical marijuana can be a wonderful medicine and is a blessing to many chronically ill people, and NORML will always be in full support of safe access for patients.

However, if you really want to do what’s best for patients, you must support full legalization.

I am not talking about decrim. I am talking about a regulated (and yes, taxed) market in which businesses and nonprofits sell marijuana to citizens. Or, those citizens grow their own and share it with friends. Sort of like beer and wine today.

In this future world I am envisioning, big businesses will sell tolerable pot for cheap to people who don’t care much for quality. Smaller players will enjoy a connoisseurs’ market of high end crystal-caked gorgeous buds. And local “grassroots” clubs of growers will share the fruits of their gardens amongst their membership.

And the patients most in need, those people for whom marijuana is not social, is not cool, and has little aesthetic aspect, those people for whom marijuana provides important, sometimes near-miraculous therapeutic benefits, will be better off in such a world.

Walk with me, into this world:

First, the price will fall. The price of cannabis is inflated by prohibition currently. Why would a grower sell an ounce for $100 that can be sold for $200-300 by their patient five minutes later? Altruism? Sure, it can happen. But the market bears what the market can bear, and many Montana cardholders, I suspect, would quickly take advantage of such reasonable pricing.

In a world in which everyone can buy it for $100, that temptation, that opportunity, mostly evaporates.

Are there people buying cases of wine and selling $8 glasses? Sure — they’re called restaurants. They’re regulated, it’s legal, it’s okay.

Second, while free market economics is arguably a savage system, one thing it certainly does is offer the consumer lots of options. May the best product win. Imagine if retailers were competing not just on price, but on variety and quality as well. Imagine huge menu boards (like these) of dozens of strains, dozens of edibles, tinctures, cocktails, salves, oils, and who knows what else we’ll come up with.

And, you can go to any retailer you like.  Want a high-CBD banana muffin to ease your pain? Stop by my shop on 3rd street. Does your ailment benefit from Romulan-derived tincture to help with your chemo-induced nausea? The collective in Darby produces the best, and it’s available at retailers statewide. Looking for  a soaring cerebral experience from pre-rolled hemp-paper 2-gram joints  of Super Lemon Haze to inspire art, poetry, and conversation? Got you covered, at the boutique place on the 8th floor of the Millennium Building downtown.

Third, medical marijuana treats patients like second class citizens. In Montana, despite the media hype, a person must jump through various expensive bureaucratic hoops to get and stay legal. If your current doctor (if you are fortunate enough to have one) is too uninformed or afraid to sign the papers, then choosing a potentially-less-than-savory “clinic” is the next unpleasant step.  Then the government papers (hopefully) get sent off to a state agency for review. In weeks, or sometimes months, you get your card. I hope you chose a trustworthy caregiver. I hope their crop succeeds. I hope they don’t get busted. And, in a few months, you need to start thinking about the renewal process.

Marijuana is one of the safest therapeutic herbs known to humankind, less toxic than aspirin and less addictive than caffeine. Why not make it more accessible to people with dire medical conditions?

Further, does anyone believe that marijuana is too dangerous for healthy people? Come on.

Adults shouldn’t need permission from any doctor, any cop, any bureaucrat, to use this plant responsibly, whether it’s for medical, spiritual, artistic, social, or other personal reasons.

Legalization is the best thing for patients. Spread the word.

Montana NORML Newsletter – Legislation, Voting, Women’s Marijuana Movement and the News

October 1st, 2010

Montanans,

I know we here in Montana sometimes express disdain, even disgust, with all things California. However, it cannot be denied that the state has been on the forefront of numerous social issues, and now, ending marijuana prohibition is on California’s agenda.

Over the past few weeks, we’ve called for Montanans to donate to help California activists pass their “Proposition 19“.  The idea is, if California can end marijuana prohibition in their state, other states will likely follow, eventually. I predict Montana could do it in just a few years. Maybe, if you and I really work at it, sooner than that.

The result of our fundraising campaign was encouraging. Together, we raised about $500 for the campaign (click through to learn more and donate directly). I can only imagine the response when we’re working (soon) to make marijuana legal for all Montana adults!


Meanwhile, back at the ranch, Montana legislative candidates are trying to get elected, and some of them will soon be trying to change our marijuana laws.  Some of them want to eliminate medical marijuana altogether while others want to end prohibition entirely.

How do you know who’s who? Consult this site: Montana Legislative Candidates’ Positions on Marijuana

The site is a partnership between Montana NORML, the Montana Medical Growers’ Association, and other organizations that work to reform cannabis laws in Montana. It’s your go-to tool for guidance on how to vote for marijuana law reform. Check back often, because we’re updating it with new info frequently.

Today, we added info for two Flathead districts (HD 3 and HD 4), and one Missoula district (HD 96). Click the map to figure out your district!



Important Alert!

Ladies, if you’re ready to step up and speak out for cannabis liberty, now’s the time. The Women’s Marijuana Movement is preparing a nationwide Day of Action on Tuesday, October 7th at 12:30PM.  If you’d like to be involved, email us (norml@montananorml.org) ASAP,  and/or show up at the northwest side of the Higgins Street Bridge in Missoula, by Caras Park. Bring your ovaries, attitude, and SAFER-compatible signs, please!

Facebook Fans, here’s the event page.


And now, the latest marijuana news from around the GREAT state of Montana:

Montana Marijuana News

Marijuana News from Beyond

Thanks for your interest and support.  Remember always that we have Truth, Justice, and Liberty on our sideNobodyshould be arrested for marijuana use. Let’s “Just Say Now“, and end marijuana prohibition, tomorrow.

Onwards and Upwards.

Montana NORML Newsletter – Many Thanks, Prop 19, Story Searchers and the News

September 24th, 2010

Activists and friends,

First, a huge thank you:

THANK YOU!

Last week, I asked for donations to be forwarded on to the folks at Yes on 19, the group that’s working to make cannabis legal for adults in California. And some of you stood up and donated!

While Prop 19 isn’t perfect, it’s the best chance we have any time soon to completely remove the threat of arrest for American adults growing and consuming their own marijuana! The idea is, once California ends cannabis prohibition, other states won’t be far behind.

I’ll tell you what — to sweeten the pot, I’ll personally match your Paypal donations received by Montana NORML before Oct 1st, up to $500.

Jack Herer used to say something like, “Cannabis won’t re-legalize itself. Until cannabis consumers are willing to 1) vote, and 2) give 20 minutes or $20 to reform, it just won’t happen.

So here’s a moment to consider stepping up and contributing. We’re hoping to raise $1000 by next Thursday. Can you throw in $4.20 via PayPal?

Onwards… we’ve had two professional production companies separately contact us requesting contact info for Montana marijuana businesses.  Between the two companies, they’ve worked on programs with which you might be familiar, including Mythbusters, History Detectives, and many more. They’re both looking for stories that include “a fun family or tight knit staff with big personalities and a passion for the business“.

Is that you? Ready for your “5 minutes of fame”? Here’s who to call:

  • Isham Randolph @ Beyond Productions: 202.315.8141
  • Jason Watt @ Lion TV: 212-206-8633 x3887

A statewide event you may want to consider is the Montana Medical Growers Association Annual Symposium on Oct 10-11. We’ll be there, and hopefully have a chance to express our message to the group as well. I should know by next week.

And now, the news…

Montana Marijuana News

Onwards and upwards.

Montana NORML Newsletter – Prop 19, National NORML Conference and the News

September 17th, 2010

Patriots,

I’ve never been more sure that working to make marijuana legal for all responsible adults is a just and noble cause. I spent part of the last week in Portland Oregon, at the 2010 National NORML Conference. Here’s a very brief peek at what I learned:

First, as most of you know, California voters will decide whether to pass Prop 19 in about six weeks. If it passes, marijuana would be legal for adults 21+ to grow and possess and consume. There are more details, but that’s the core element you need to understand.

The fact that it’s on the ballot and polling at just about 50% approval right now is already a great success. Mainstream society is really talking about and seriously considering ending marijuana prohibition. We’re almost there.

Unfortunately, some groups working to defeat the initiative — not just the law enforcement and the booze industries, but also groups that consider themselves marijuana activists. Some commercial growers.  Some “I gots mine” medical marijuana people. And some pie-in-the-sky ‘treat maryjane like dandelions’ folks.

Prop 19 ain’t perfect. How could it be perfect, for all of us? But it stops the arrest of overwise law-abiding adults for growing their own. That’s a policy worth supporting! We can continue to make improvements, but with nearly a million people arrested for cannabis nationwide last year (as usual),  the sooner we can stop the insanity, the better.

In the end, the victory or defeat of Prop 19 will likely come down to who has the most cash for ads — the supporters or the opponents? So, now, I’m asking each of you to make a donation to Montana NORML before Oct 1st. We’ll send donations received between now and then to the campaign in California. Donate $4.20, or $42, or $420, today.  Visit any page on the Montana NORML website and click the yellow donate button on the right-hand side. Pool spare couch change with your friends. Make a Montana NORML deposit at Missoula Federal Credit Union. Raid your 401k (just kidding). Please help us to reach our goal of $1000 by October 1st  (which is do-able, if YOU donate just $4.20!) (And of course, if you’d prefer the money stayed with Montana NORML to support our work to make marijuana legal for Montana adults, just let us know.)

The other presentation in Portland that made a big impact on me was about whether medical marijuana will actually make it harder to make cannabis legal for all grownups. I’ve wondered the same thing, but this presentation gave me, and now you, the tools to ensure that doesn’t happen. A few quick recollections:

  • Stop calling it “medicine”. Medicine isn’t social, medicine isn’t advertised by price, medicine isn’t sold with sex appeal, and medicine isn’t cooler when it’s big (big buds, big joints, big bongs). Of course cannabis has incredible medical benefits. But that doesn’t mean we should treat it like Codeine and Prozac. Call it an “herbal supplement” maybe.
  • Medical marijuana laws treat patients like second-class citizens, through price gouging and being forced to jump through bureaucratic hoops as a last resort, rather than as a readily accessible and safest first option.
  • Stop agreeing that there is “abuse” of the medical marijuana law. The card-carrying “grinning 20-somethings”, as I’ve called them, are simply demonstrating their eagerness to comply with the law. They would rather be a part of a legal regulated system than the criminal black market.  That’s just being a good citizen!
  • Medical marijuana is a “trial period” for legalization. Despite the media histrionics, we are discovering that society does not collapse when 25,000 people are exempt from arrest for marijuana possession. Let’s take the next step.
  • Adults shouldn’t need permission from a doctor to use one of the safest therapeutically active substances known to humankind. It’s less addictive than caffeine and less toxic than aspirin.

Some of the above might ruffle some feathers. But when we have Truth, Justice, and Liberty on our side, we need to keep speaking out.

Next week, I’ll be back to encouraging you to register to vote, learn who’s running to represent YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD, and so forth. But for now, the news:

Montana Marijuana News

Bonus News

Kindest regards.