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Silence the Forgotten Soul

Support HR 5843 - Decriminalization of Cannabis

Sun Aug 3, 2008, 1:16 PM
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Date: Aug 3, 2008 2:34 PM


Thanks to ALL:
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Support Barney Frank's Personal Use Act!
Marijuana decriminalization bill gaining support in Congress
July 31, 2008

Yesterday, MPP's Rob Kampia and Congressman Barney Frank (D-Mass) held a press conference to support HR 5843, the Personal Use of Marijuana by Responsible Adults Act of 2008

Click here to ask your member of Congress to support this legislation
Congressman Frank's legislation would decriminalize the possession of up to 100 grams of marijuana and the not-for-profit transfer of one ounce of marijuana It would not affect laws prohibiting drug sales or the cultivation of marijuana, and it would not affect state or local laws regulating marijuana possession

"It's time for the politicians to catch up with the public on this [issue]," Congressman Frank said "The notion that you lock people up for smoking marijuana is pretty silly"

The bill incorporates the basic recommendation of the National Commission on Marijuana and Drug Abuse (also known as the Shafer Commission) The commission, which was administered by the White House and published its findings in 1972, recommended that then-president Richard Nixon decriminalize possession of marijuana in amounts that constituted "simple possession"

Thirty-six years later, Rep Frank will try to do just that



Why support this legislation?

- Currently, 1 out of every 100 Americans is behind bars, and many of these prisoners are non-violent drug offenders

- Arresting, prosecuting, and incarcerating people simply for possessing marijuana for personal use is an illogical waste of our government's limited resources

- Each year, more than 700,000 people are arrested for marijuana offenses, costing American taxpayers more than $7 billion annually Despite this, marijuana is still easily available, both to adults and minors

- The money saved from ending marijuana prohibition could provide health insurance each year to 45 million uninsured children in the US This legislation would be an important first step towards that

[link]

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I don't live in the US, but if I could put my word in to support this, I would. Seeing that money go towards health care for uninsured children instead of being wasted on non-violent "criminals" would go a long way towards helping set a good example for the world, esp. when it comes to setting viable priorities.

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Fully agree with the bill, unfortunately the "war on drugs" movement that has been going on for the last 20 years will probably kill it -- lame, I know. :(

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It's a waste of money and energy to persecute consuments of marijuana but probably it's the most pleasant job there is for the police. Over here the debate whether to allow canabis has been going on for years and there is still no final verdict.

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=ImagersFractalDDs *Apophysis*Tubaholics-Anonymous *FractalDreams ~DeviousFractals
A few things infuriate me about the subject of marijuana. 1. The fact that when I got a citation for paraphernalia (no pot, just a pipe) I had to pay $300 in victim's compensation. WHAT? Me smoking weed privately, not driving around or bothering anyone, is a "crime" that has no victim. What I nice flow of money the government has flowing in by pulling that crap.
2. Why is it that if one was driving around with a gun, rope, duct tape, and a shovel, and the police stopped them, they couldn't be taken in for anything because they weren't "in the act" but if I have more than an ounce of weed on me, I automatically have intent to sell even though they have no evidence to base that fact on?

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I agree with both your points. It's ridiculous that a plant given to us by nature has been outlawed so much that over 800,000 non-violent "criminals" are behind bars because of it. Trillions of dollars that could have been made with the production of the hemp plant for beneficial uses has been ignored, and instead the government would rather waste tax payers money supporting potheads behind bars. Nearly every aspect of the drug war has failed, and it's time the government realizes the err of their ways. Prohibition only creates an underground market putting the drug money in the hands of true criminals.. the one's who would kill you for trying to step into their business. Those are the people that belong behind bars.. not the people trying to enjoy themselves after a hard day's work. Thanks for your input. :D

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