Hemp for Victory

2012-05-18 0:49:56 - Не могу записать данные в файл: /home/cannabis/public_html/cache_tnxx/cache_cannabisfanclub_net_db.txt
2012-05-18 0:49:56 - Не могу записать данные в файл: /home/cannabis/public_html/cache_tnxx/cache_cannabisfanclub_net_db.txt
2012-05-18 0:49:56 - Не могу записать данные в файл: /home/cannabis/public_html/cache_tnxx/cache_cannabisfanclub_net_db.txt

The News Review:

- Hemp for Victory
- Drug bust in San Francisco could be start of new campaign against pot
- Pot decriminalizing measure up for debate
- Del Rio News-Herald

Hemp for Victory
Collective Bellaciao – Jun 26, 2005
Last year, about $250 million worth of hemp products were purchased from abroad. But federal law in the US prohibits farmers or anyone else from growing it on US soil. Why? The DEA says that industrial hemp grown next to marijuana can camouflage and impede law enforcement against the latter. This problem doesn’t bother Canadian police authorities or similar officials in other nations. No marijuana grower wants industrial hemp anywhere near his or her pot plots…
This problem doesn’t bother Canadian police authorities or similar officials in other nations. No marijuana grower wants industrial hemp anywhere near his or her pot plots. You can smoke a bushel of industrial hemp and not get high. Far too little THC. Like poppy seeds on bread. You may, however, get a headache, if you try.

Drug bust in San Francisco could be start of new campaign against pot
News-Medical.net – Jun 26, 2005
Since California legalized the drug as medicine, dozens of cannabis clubs have thrived in San Francisco but officials declared that the busts would not undermine the city’s role as a haven for medical marijuana users. Apparently the indictments are the result of a two-year investigation by U. drug agents into a network that allegedly cultivated at least 17,000 marijuana plants, trafficked in Ecstasy and engaged in money laundering and international bulk cash smuggling…
attorney in San Francisco, says this is not about ill people using marijuana, but about a widespread criminal enterprise. Medical marijuana advocates and supporters however say it remains unclear whether the bust was the start of a renewed campaign by U. drug agents against pot dispensaries. Pierre, executive director of the.

Pot decriminalizing measure up for debate
Milford Daily News – Jun 26, 2005
The bill, filed in the Senate, would make marijuana possession a civil offense punishable by a $100 fine. “As far as public opinion is concerned, this should pass,” said Whitney Taylor, executive director of the Drug Policy Forum of Massachusetts. “Voters are way ahead of the politicians on this. Voters in six legislative districts approved nonbinding measures in favor of marijuana decriminalization last November, according to the Drug Policy Forum. Since 2000, there have been 36 ballot questions regarding decriminalization, medical marijuana and marijuana taxation and regulation, and voters approved every one, the group said…
Research that will be presented today indicates the state would save at least $24. 3 million in annual law enforcement and court costs by decriminalizing weed, she said. Though possession of marijuana for personal use usually doesn’t lead to jail time, those convicted can lose government student loans and scholarships and become ineligible for many forms of military service and private and public sector jobs, according to the Drug Policy Forum. They also may be at risk of losing driver’s and professional licenses and custody of their children, the group said. “Although many people don’t go to prison for simple possession of drugs, a felony conviction is very harmful,” Taylor said. “People think, ‘Oh, they’re not going to jail. ‘ But it really does affect you.

Del Rio News-Herald
Del Rio News Herald – Jun 26, 2005
Rodriguez said costales, used in Mexico to package flour, sugar and other powdery substances, often are used to wrap marijuana for transport. Rodriguez said the costal, which measures about 3 feet long, 2 feet wide and 2 feet high, was also bound with rope. As I came up to it, I could smell the marijuana, a really strong odor of marijuana. That was proof positive to me, Rodriguez said. The deputy said he hailed the two Border Patrol agents working in the brush south of the road and told them what he had discovered. The two agents said they would re-check the brush. Rodriguez said he then began walking back to retrieve his car when he heard one of the Border Patrol agents shouting at someone in Spanish and heard the sound of running feet…
Rodriguez said as he walked around the car, he noticed a costal on the ground, pushed partially under the car. Rodriguez said costales, used in Mexico to package flour, sugar and other powdery substances, often are used to wrap marijuana for transport. Rodriguez said the costal, which measures about 3 feet long, 2 feet wide and 2 feet high, was also bound with rope. As I came up to it, I could smell the marijuana, a really strong odor of marijuana. That was proof positive to me, Rodriguez said. The deputy said he hailed the two Border Patrol agents working in the brush south of the road and told them what he had discovered. The two agents said they would re-check the brush.

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