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Written by SAFER
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Saturday, 17 September 2011
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In his latest nationally syndicated column, bestselling author David Sirota takes on the hypocrisy of how colleges treat student marijuana use compared to student alcohol use. He does a great job of highlighting the relative safety of marijuana and really raises some good questions about the efficacy -- and potential harm -- of campus policies that punish students more harshly for marijuana than for alcohol. Here's a great excerpt, and you can read the entire column at:
http://www.suntimes.com/news/otherviews/7698598-417/college-hypocrisy-pots-bad-but-party-hard-on-booze.html Though little noticed for their role in America’s selective War on
Drugs, universities have become a key player shotgunning the oxymoronic
“alcohol is acceptable but pot is evil” mentality down the
beer-bong-primed throats of America’s youth. Consider the University of
Colorado... CU embodies the norm in our universities, almost all of which have harsher penalties for marijuana possession than alcohol use.
Though students at more than a dozen schools
across the country recently voted for referenda demanding administrators
equalize punishments, the initiatives have been ignored. Instead,
school officials are fighting to instill America’s destructive drug-war
mentality in the next generation. The result is the perpetuation of a
toxic ethos that encourages us to party hard, but only with a substance
that is far more dangerous than marijuana...
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Written by SAFER
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Thursday, 18 August 2011
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In an interview on the NORML Show Live, proponent Mason Tvert
discusses the initiative and the Campaign to Regulate Marijuana Like
Alcohol.
The interview begins around the -11:10 mark:
http://stash.norml.org/norml-show-live-761
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Written by SAFER
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Monday, 15 August 2011
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There's a great column in the Tennessean today from NORML deputy director and "Marijuana is Safer" co-author Paul Armentano.
Here's an excerpt, or you can read entire piece HERE: And unlike alcohol and tobacco, adverse effects of even heavy
cannabis use are minimal. There is no epidemiological evidence in any
country, after scores of studies and centuries of use by tens of
millions of people, that marijuana smokers have a shorter life
expectancy than non-smokers. They don’t become violent at sports
events or beat their spouses and children. They don’t get heart disease,
cancer, brain damage or any other deadly illness at a higher rate than
those who abstain. In fact, a pair of studies conducted by Kaiser
Permanente found that marijuana use, even long-term, was not associated
with elevated levels of mortality or incidences of cancer, including
types of cancers associated with tobacco smoking.
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Written by SAFER
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Friday, 08 July 2011
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Late last week, SAFER, along with a broad coalition of state and national organizations, launched the Campaign to Regulate Marijuana Like Alcohol in support of a 2012 ballot initiative to end marijuana prohibition in Colorado.
SAFER has been and will continue to be a driving force in support of marijuana reform in Colorado. Moving forward, the organization will be spearheading grassroots organizing and public education efforts, as well as working closely with our coalition partners to run the strongest initiative campaign possible.
The campaign’s first goal is to collect the roughly 85,000 valid signatures of Colorado voters necessary to qualify the measure for next year’s election. This is no easy feat, so we hope marijuana reform supporters from around the state will get involved in the effort to place this initiative on the ballot. We also hope you will support our critical role in this historic campaign by making a donation -- in particular, we encourage you to consider signing up to start making automated monthly donations that will help us on an ongoing basis over the next 15 months.
This will be a volunteer-powered grassroots campaign whose success will depend largely on supporters such as you. So please take a minute to check out the campaign website, sign up to get involved, make a donation, and help us spread the word. By joining the campaign today you can help end marijuana prohibition in Colorado next year and be part of something that will be written about in history books for years to come.
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