Showing posts with label Legalize it. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Legalize it. Show all posts

August 17, 2008

BC Bud Goes Global

I watched a BBC TV report on this subject today which was quite entertaining. Especially humorous was the lovely anchor trying to look serious and purposeful while introducing the clip! Unfortunately, the link was unavailable, but here is part of the story:
Canada's spreading cannabis crop
Page last updated at 12:02 GMT, Tuesday, 22 July 2008 13:02 UKAs we walk into John's basement, the smell is so overwhelming it almost knocks me off my feet.
In front of me stand 120 marijuana plants whose thick bushy leaves cover the strong stems.
John explains quite nonchalantly that this is just a small growing operation, or grow-ops as they are known throughout Canada.
[...] Inspector Brian Cantera of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) in Vancouver believes that John's small grow-op is one of 20,000 to be found in residential houses around the province.
That figure excludes the larger grow-ops in industrial locations, not to mention the huge dope farms that are scattered around British Columbia's vast interior.
If Inspector Cantera's estimates are accurate, then British Columbia is probably home to the largest concentration of organised criminal syndicates in the world.
The striking aspect of BC's marijuana trade is that it has gone beyond the boundaries of traditional organised crime groups (although some are still heavily involved) and entered into the middle classes [astonishing! you can’t possibly mean it!].
Much of the revenue derived from BC Bud, as the cannabis crop is known, goes on paying college fees, perhaps buying a second car or making that holiday to the Caribbean just a little bit more affordable.
The trade is so large that the police in BC are faced with an impossible task.
[...] Billy Weselowski and his wife Kim have devoted themselves to helping vulnerable women caught up in drug and alcohol addiction to restart their lives.
Billy rails against those Canadians who are demanding the legalisation of marijuana.
"I've dealt with at least 20,000 addicts, and easily 10,000 will tell you they've relapsed on marijuana¿That's the underbelly of what marijuana (is) about - what it's doing to people. And it's like alcohol - it runs an industry."
But the marijuana growers have equally passionate supporters like Michelle Rainey who has the legal right to cultivate a limited amount of marijuana for medicinal purposes.
She says it is the only thing that helps relieve the pain inflicted by the debilitating Crohn's disease from which she suffers.
But she is sought by the US to face charges of conspiracy and money-laundering because of a legal Vancouver-based marijuana seed business with which she was previously involved.
Over the past decade, Canada has been moving slowly towards a more benign regime of toleration towards marijuana (although the current minority federal government of Stephen Harper vehemently opposes this development).
This has placed the trade in the middle of some intense arguments between Canada (and BC in particular) on the one hand and the US and its guardian on drugs orthodoxy, the Office of National Drug Control Policy, on the other.
If BC's marijuana trade ever did force through a change in the legal status of the drug in Canada, the implications for Canadian-US relations would be profound. This will be a crime story well worth watching.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/7519178.stm

Waiting to Inhale is highly recommended to further your understanding of the seriousness of medical marijuana. It is available from Ironweed.org. Ironweed's monthly dvd selectioni usualy has more than one film on the same topic, and included on this DVD are two other films on the medical [dis]establishment, Health, Money and Fear and Collateral Damage: Bad Medicine in Tennessee: http://www.ironweedfilms.com/

December 1, 2007

Activisism Works!

Don't tell me there's no hope. We need to tell our history to the youngsters and keep the faith. From Crooks & Liars & YouTube comes raw truth from the cultural revolution of the 70s. Magnificent moments include John & Yoko performing, Allen Ginsburg chanting and best of all, John Sinclair's beautiful daughter running into his arms exclaiming "Daddy's FREE!":
“20 To Life: The Life and Times of John Sinclair”
By: Mark Groubert on Friday, November 30th, 2007 at 10:01 PM - PST
Documentary reviewed by Mark Groubert
“Apathy isn’t it. And we can do something. So flower power didn’t work. So what! We start again.”

John Lennon

John Sinclair Freedom Rally, Crisler Arena, Michigan - December 10, 1971.
If it was up to Richard Nixon, 20 To Life: The Life and Times of John Sinclair, a documentary by Steve Gebhardt, would never have seen the light of day. Hired as the private experimental filmmaker for John Lennon and Yoko Ono back in 1971, Gebhardt was working on a full-length music video to help promote Lennon’s upcoming album, Imagine when he and Lennon heard about the benefit concert to help free political activist John Sinclair from prison.
Sinclair, head of the White Panther Party, manager of the seminal rock band the MC5 and one of the leading radical elements of the Midwest had been targeted by Detroit undercover cops who arrested him for passing two joints. Facing 20 years to life and actually sentenced to 9 1/2 years for the crime, Sinclair became the focus of a huge benefit concert at the Crisler Arena in Ann Arbor, Michigan featuring John Lennon, Stevie Wonder, Bob Seeger, Phil Ochs, MC-5, Allen Ginsberg, Commander Cody & His Lost Planet Airmen, Mitch Ryder & the Detroit Wheels and others.
Over 20,000 people attended the show.
Having already spent nearly three years behind bars, John Sinclair was freed from prison just three days after the event.