Photo: art.com |
The Christmas Cards for Cannabis effort, sponsored by the activist group Moms for Marijuana, gives you a way brighten the holidays for those who are being held in prison for weed.
Graphic: Moms for Marijuana |
Photo: art.com |
The Christmas Cards for Cannabis effort, sponsored by the activist group Moms for Marijuana, gives you a way brighten the holidays for those who are being held in prison for weed.
Graphic: Moms for Marijuana |
“It sure is good to come to a great university and speak to a bunch of good Baptists-I see you all up there sitting in the back row,” joked state Senator Joey Pendleton (D-Hopkinsville) at the opening of his speech on the night of Nov. 17 in Wallace.
Right off the bat, Senator Pendleton made his audience feel at home with a bit of a jest and a smile. Though his demeanor was lighthearted, the subject he came to speak about was an issue that has been seriously debated in recent months.
Pendleton, who was invited to speak on campus by Eastern’s student NORML (National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws) chapter, spoke on the agricultural, environmental and economic benefits that the legalization of industrial hemp could bring to Kentucky.
“It [industrial hemp] is much more environmentally friendly, easier and cheaper to grow than a lot of other crops, and can be mixed with coal to create a cleaner burning product for fuel,” Pendleton said.
The senator said hemp could be economically beneficial as well. He said that according to projections by state officials, legalizing the hemp industry could generate a $4-5 million profit for Kentucky, while simultaneously creating thousands of jobs for Kentucky citizens.
Taking advantage of hemp’s fuel opportunities could also make the United States much less dependent on foreign oils, Pendleton said
Sophomore American Sign Language major Devan Owens echoed the Senator’s idea. “Hemp is probably one of the most multi-purposeful materials available; and with little to no THC, I just don’t understand [why it’s illegal],” he said.
Many students came to Wallace 147 to hear the Kentucky senator speak, some NORML members and some not.
“It’s time to educate people,” said NORML president Ashley Sharpe. “It’s time for change, and I am ready to be a part of it.”
Senator Pendleton’s advice to anyone seeking to have their opinion represented in Kentucky legislation should contact their local representatives and senators-preferably by personal e-mail-because it has a more “personal touch.”
“Educate people as to what we’re doing here,” Pendleton said. “People need to know and understand that what we’re dealing with isn’t smoking marijuana, but a completely different animal altogether.”
He also said writing letters, collecting signatures, voting when election time rolls around and organizing campaigns are also great ways for advocates to have their voices heard in Kentucky’s legislative world.
“The wheel that squeaks the loudest will be the one that gets greased,” Pendleton said near the close of his speech, metaphorically summing up the advice he had been giving to students wishing to get involved in the cause to legalize industrial hemp.
http://media.www.easternprogress.com/media/storage/paper419/news/2010/12/02/News/Senator.Speaks.Of.ProHemp.Politics-3963385.shtml
The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) of Michigan sued the cities of Birmingham, Bloomfield Hills and Livonia today, claiming their ordinances banning medical marijuana are in direct violation of the 2008 Michigan Medical Marihuana Act (MMMA).
According to the ACLU, the lawsuit asks that the city ordinances be declared invalid.
According to the lawsuit, the ACLU is suing on behalf of Birmingham residents Robert and Linda Lott. Linda has suffered from multiple sclerosis for 28 years, is blind and confined to a wheelchair, while Robert was recently diagnosed with glaucoma. Both qualify as patients under the MMMA and are registered as such with the Michigan Department of Community Health. In addition, Robert is registered as Linda’s primary caregiver, allowing him to grow marijuana plants for Linda and himself.
The MMMA allows and provides protection for the medical use of marijuana for patients and their caregivers when used to treat “dehilitating medical conditions,” including multiple sclerosis and glaucoma. The MMMA states that registered patients and their caregivers “shall not be subject to arrest, prosecution, or penalty in any manner” for growing, possessing and using marijuana.
Last year, however, Birmingham adopted an ordinance prohibiting any activity that violates federal law. Since using medical marijuana is still illegal under the federal Controlled Substance Act, the Lotts could be arrested and prosecuted for possessing the drug in her home.
The ACLU press release stated that the federal government typically does not prosecute medical marijuana patients and caregivers if they comply with their state’s medical marijuana law. In 2008, the MMMA passed by 71 percent in Birmingham.
According to the press release, Lott is also suing the cities of Bloomfield Hills and Livonia for similar ordinances. A member of a private club in Bloomfield Hills, Lott is banned from using marijuana throughout the city. And under its ordinance, Lott’s husband, Robert, is prevented from growing marijuana in a building he owns in Livonia.
According to Birmingham City Commission Mayor Gordon Rinschler, Birmingham adopted its ordinance a little over a year ago not necessarily in response to the MMMA, but as part of the commission’s discussion of the act and its ramifications. Rinschler said he couldn’t comment on pending litigation, but said the MMMA is ripe for a challenge.
“The Michigan Marihuana Act has so many problems associated with it, (this) is going just going to have to play out over time,” Rinschler said.
http://birmingham.patch.com/articles/in-brief-birmingham-among-cities-sued-by-aclu-for-banning-medical-marijuana
Lichfield-based building contractor Linford Group has won a national award for its “ground-breaking” Renewable House. The contractor lifted the top Innovation award at the Constructing Excellence National Awards for the property, which is located at the Building Research Establishment (BRE) Innovation Park in Watford.
Developed in conjunction with the National Non-Food Crops Centre, The Renewable House is constructed of Hemcrete, a sustainable building material derived from hemp, rather than bricks and mortar. The substance has been developed by Lime Technologies, a partner in the build.
The Renewable House was constructed entirely from renewable materials, and is “showing the way that Britain’s housing stock may go in the future”.
Neil Walters, group commercial director, said: “Innovation doesn’t need to cost the earth. The Renewable House is a highly sustainable building, but it will cost pretty much the same to build as a normal brick house.
“We also believe that to gain widespread acceptance in a culture sceptical of green buildings that the house benefits from looking ‘normal’ and doesn’t need a host of ‘renewables’ normally associated with green buildings.”
http://www.insidermedia.com/insider/midlands/43333-hemp-house-wins-construction-prize/
By Phillip Smith
Jack Herer, author of “The Emperor Wears No Clothes,” and arguably “the greatest cannabis crusader of all time,” died in April after suffering a heart attack at the Portland Hempstalk Festival eight months earlier. The passing of the movement icon prompted the release of this memorial tribute edition of “Jack Herer is the Emperor of Hemp,” which updates the decade-old release with new interview footage with the prophet of hemp and includes the entire 1943 Department of Agriculture film “Hemp for Victory.”
Herer’s story is a true American journey (and by the way, it’s pronounced HAIR-er, not Huh-RARE). Born in 1939, Herer entered the 1960s as a conservative — an Army veteran and Goldwater supporter, married and living in California’s Central Valley, who was offended by the upheavals of the time, disgusted by anti-war protestors, and blamed much of the upheaval on the demon weed. Who knew?
By the following decade, things had changed dramatically. Divorced, Herer’s new girlfriend persuaded him to try marijuana. Here, the DVD shows a dancing girl as Norman Greenbaum’s “Spirit in the Sky” booms out on the soundtrack, an apt evocation of Herer’s transformation from military policeman to hippie, from Goldwater Republican to radical.
With Emmy Award winner Peter Coyote narrating, and with archival footage and interviews from the likes of NORML’s Keith Stroup, historian Michael Aldrich, Kevin Zeese, and Dr. John Morgan, “Jack Herer” tracks Herer’s odyssey from author of a 1973 marijuana cartoon book to his subsequent experience as recipient of knowledge from innumerable people about not just pot, but hemp, and all its uses, his opening of the first hemp store on Venice Beach in 1979, and ultimately the publication of the book that made him famous and re-energized the marijuana legalization movement, “The Emperor Wears No Clothes.”
The DVD acknowledges the early conflicts between Herer and the drug reform movement, which at first considered him at best an over-enthusiastic partisan and at worst a crank. Herer thought hemp could be central to ending marijuana prohibition, not to mention that it could “save the world,” and the be-suited boys back East weren’t buying what that wild-eyed, tie-dyed, missionary Californian was selling.
A number of years later, the movement types were suitable contrite. “He overstated the case a bit,” said Stroup. “We were embarrassed; we thought it could undermine our credibility.”
Instead Herer almost singlehandedly revitalized the pot movement with the 1985 publication of “The Emperor Wears No Clothes,” the magnum opus of hemp, and an intoxicating combination of unknown history, polemics, and passion that turned a new generation on not just to hemp, but to pot, the history of its criminalization, and the need to undo prohibition.
“Jack Herer” describes the tenets of “The Emperor Wears No Clothes” fairly without wholeheartedly endorsing his theory of an evil troika of Harry Anslinger, the Dupont family, and Andrew Mellon conspiring to bring on prohibition. And I think that’s fair. Herer’s conspirators most certainly played a role in pot prohibition, but the anti-marijuana movement was alive and well in this country well before Anslinger and the others were active in the 1930s.
Maybe hemp won’t “save the world,” but there is no arguing that it is a tremendously valuable plant with a multitude of uses that can help improve the environment, create jobs, and provide us with everything from biodiesel to body panels to an ever-increasing variety of hemp-based foods.
And Herer’s perhaps overenthusiastic message was received enthusiastically by that new generation, especially when tied to his never-forgotten broader campaign to legalize marijuana, beginning with initiative campaigns back in the 1970s. Between bringing hemp to the forefront and energizing a movement suffering through the depths of the Reagan Era, Herer cemented his place in movement history.
But he didn’t stop there. In fact, he didn’t stop until he fell over unconscious at a movement event just after giving one last speech. Herer was a movement presence throughout the 1990s, and by then, had won the acceptance of the movement, which recognized the enormous contribution he had made. Despite a 2001 stroke that laid him low, he bounced back, still out proselytizing and organizing, even as he moved slowly and struggled to control his voice.
In California, at least, every marijuana movement figure of a certain age knew Jack Herer. Whether from his days as the hemp hawker of Venice Beach or the decades of activism that followed, Herer has made a lasting impact on California’s — and indeed, the country’s — marijuana legalization movement. “Jack Herer is the Emperor of Hemp” pays fond homage to a true movement hero. It is definitely worth checking out, especially as you ponder the man, his life’s work, and his impact on the marijuana reform movement.