Showing posts with label prohibition. Show all posts
Showing posts with label prohibition. Show all posts
Tim Cushing: Drug Dogs Don't Even Have To Be Right Half The Time To Be Considered 'Reliable' By The Courts
The pretense of probable cause. All in all, this motion to suppress evidence worked out for the plaintiff, but it does little to address concerns that drug dogs are basically blank permission slips for inquisitive cops. The defendant -- Emile Martin -- was in a vehicle driven by another person (simply referred to as "Montgomery" in the opinion). This vehicle ... MORE
Why Jury Nullification? New Jersey Man Sentenced To Eight Years In Prison For Growing 17 Marijuana Plants
by MaryAnn Spoto. Because justice is a result, not simply a process. A Mays Landing man was sentenced to eight years in prison on Friday for growing 17 marijuana plants in the Pinelands. When Jon Peditto was arrested in 2012, he admitted the pot plants were his and told investigators he grew them primarily for his own use but had also ... MORE
Labels:
drug war,
government,
jury nullification,
justice,
marijuana,
prohibition,
victimless crimes
Julia Vitullo Martin: Drunk With Power
How Prohibition led to big government. If they think about Prohibition at all, most Americans probably accept Columbia University historian Richard Hofstadter’s conclusion that it was a farce, a “ludicrous caricature of the reforming impulse,” an ineffective albeit financially costly moral crusade imposed on a reluctant populace. Decades ... MORE
Labels:
alcohol,
bureaucracy,
control,
crime,
FBI,
federal,
government,
politicians,
power,
prohibition
Colorado Celebrates Marijuana Legalization Anniversary; Massive Drop In Arrests and Millions In Tax Revenue
by Art Way. More than three years have passed since Colorado residents voted to
legalize marijuana, which immediately allowed adults to possess and
cultivate limited amounts of marijuana. This past New Year’s Day marked
the two year anniversary of adults being able to legally buy marijuana in Colorado. The policy is still in its formative stage, ... MORE
California Town Goes Podunk; Seeks To Stymie Medical Pot
by Thaddeus Miller. As state pot policy moves forward, one city goes backwards. Medical marijuana cardholders will not be allowed to grow cannabis for their own consumption after a vote Monday while the Merced City Council figures out what cultivation and dispensaries should be permitted in the city. The council unanimously passed the ... MORE
Labels:
drug war,
law,
medical marijuana,
medicine,
politicians,
prohibition,
regulation,
restrictions
The Federal Ban On Medical Marijuana Was Not Lifted
by Jacob Sullum. Contrary to what you may have read or heard, Congress did not quietly lift the federal ban on medical marijuana. Nor did it lift the ban loudly. It did not lift the ban at all. Here is what actually happened. In December 2014, Congress approved an
omnibus spending bill that included a rider prohibiting the Justice
Department ... MORE
Labels:
cannabis,
drug war,
federal,
federalism,
government,
medical marijuana,
medicine,
prohibition
Little-Told Story Of How The U.S. Government Poisoned Alcohol During Prohibition With Deadly Consequences
by Deborah Blum. A reminder about public servants. It was Christmas Eve 1926, the streets aglitter with snow and lights, when the man afraid of Santa Claus stumbled into the emergency room at New York City's Bellevue Hospital. He was flushed, gasping with fear: Santa Claus, he kept telling the nurses, was just behind him, wielding a baseball bat. ... MORE
Labels:
alcohol,
authority,
deception,
dishonesty,
government,
politicians,
prohibition,
public service
What The War On Smoking Tells Us About The Drug War
by Danielle Allen. It was the best of times, it was the worst of times. In January 1964, the Beatles first broke onto the Billboard chart with “I Want to Hold Your Hand”; by June, Ringo Starr had collapsed from tonsillitis and pharyngitis. In January , the surgeon general announced
that scientists had found conclusive evidence linking smoking to ... MORE
Jacob Sullum: The Puzzling Persistence Of Pee Tests
A favorite tactic of control freaks. Slate columnist Daniel Engber, who was recently "shocked" to discover that workplace drug testing is still a thing, wonders: What's up with that? He finds, as I did back in 2002, that there's little evidence drug testing is a sound investment for employers: As was the case 30 years ago, testing has no solid base of evidence, ... MORE
Labels:
drug war,
employee,
employer,
individual liberty,
marijuana,
obligation,
privacy,
prohibition
Michael Thomsen: Legalizing Weed Isn’t Enough
Permit marijuana use in public. Recreational marijuana use has been legal in Seattle since 2012, but I still felt like I was getting away with something when I walked into a dispensary there this fall. There was a bouncer waiting behind a roped-off entryway on the otherwise quiet Capitol Hill side street. He passed my driver’s license through a ... MORE
Labels:
alcohol,
behavior,
cannabis,
crime,
drug war,
marijuana,
prohibition,
racism,
victimless crimes
Justin Gardner: A Federal Judge Just Shamed The DEA For Fabricating Sham Cases Trying To Justify War On Drugs
Entrapment, law enforcement's favorite tool. Since the War on Drugs began in earnest under Nixon and Reagan, the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) has ruined millions of lives for nonviolent, victimless behavior. The DEA’s drug crusade is not limited to the homeland either, as it also has sole responsibility for pursing international ... MORE
Jeff Nesbit: We Have Lost The War On Drugs
Criminalizing drugs just destroys more people. It's time, finally, to face the ugly truth. We've
lost the war on drugs in America. We need a new playbook, now, before
more lives are lost. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said last week that fatal drug overdoses in America were the highest in recorded history in 2014.
The news ... MORE
NYT Columnist Wants A Minimum Drinking Age For Soda
by Guy Bentley. Busybodies minding your own business. A New York Times columnist has proposed the government introduce a
minimum age for buying soda and card kids who try to buy Coca-Cola at
the local store. In wide-ranging discussion with Luckypeach.com,
food journalist and New York Times opinion writer Mark Bittman
attempted to equate ... MORE
Labels:
busybody,
children,
nanny state,
obesity,
prohibition,
regulation,
restrictions,
smoking,
sugar
Christopher Ingraham: One Of The Biggest Arguments Against Marijuana Legalization Is Falling Apart
Drug use continues a decade-long drop. America's high school students are using drugs and alcohol at or near the lowest levels on record, according to federal data released Wednesday. The 2015 Monitoring the Future Survey,
conducted by the University of Michigan and the National Institute on
Drug Abuse (NIDA) ... MORE
Labels:
alcohol,
cannabis,
drug war,
drugs,
government,
legalize,
marijuana,
pot,
prohibition,
youth
Top White House Drug Official: War On Drugs Is A Failure
by Alex Mierjeski. That makes it unanimous. The nation's top drug official went on CBS' "60 Minutes" Sunday night and proclaimed the old War on Drugs a failure. Michael Botticelli, who serves as the director of the White House's Office of National Drug Control Policy, also said he wants to reform and refocus U.S. drug policy. When
asked by "60 Minutes" ... MORE
Labels:
addiction,
drug war,
government,
incarceration,
policy,
prohibition,
reform,
victimless crimes
Going To Pot? Canada Leads Way In Legalizing Marijuana
by Michel Comte. Justin Trudeau raised eyebrows when he admitted to having dabbled in marijuana while a member of parliament, but his pledge as prime minister to legalize pot has been broadly cheered. He said in a policy speech on Friday that his Liberal government would introduce legislation as early as 2016 to legalize marijuana, making Canada ... MORE
Labels:
black market,
Canada,
cannabis,
drug war,
individual liberty,
legalize,
marijuana,
prohibition
Heroin And Prohibition Are A Lethal Combination
by Jacob Sullum. After the esteemed actor Philip Seymour Hoffman died in February
2014, press coverage of the "heroin epidemic" exploded. Mentions of that
phrase in the newspaper and wire service articles cataloged by Nexis
rose from 681 in 2013 to 3,222 in 2014, an increase of almost 400
percent. Yet Hoffman—who by his own account used
... MORE
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